Thanks!

So, Shelley has an actual registered business, Shelley Archives, Inc., built entirely around bootlegs. He's not giving away too many tickets for free, methinks.

As for the confusion about seizure: Items 33 and 34 (pg 7), echoed in 44 and 45 (pg 9), are not limited to the Eagles explicitly in the text, so I can see how that could be interpreted as Henley and Frey seeking seizure of the entire archive and bringing a full stop to Shelley's dealings with bootlegs. However, I believe there is a contextual implication that they are only concerned with materials copyrighted to them because that is the way it is framed in the concluding "Prayer for Relief". It only asks for Shelley to be stopped from "further infringing Henley's and Frey's rights in and to the Copyrighted Works" (pg 9) and "a seizure order directed to all infringing articles and bootlegged copies of the Unauthorized Eagles Film and Copyrighted Works in Shelley's possession" (pg 10).

I find it worth noting that they have not specified an amount. If one does the math of $150,000 per song per bootleg, plus the Eagles' attorney fees and other costs... that is millions of dollars, and that's before we even get to damages. Shelley would be bankrupted, completely ruined.

I think they hope to scare him into settling. It will be interesting to see how this plays out.