I think I disgree with sparky1. Please correct me if I am wrong.
Any instructions that he would have received from 'headquarters' would have been on a WATCHTOWER letterhead and rubber stamped Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc. or Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, Inc.
Watchtower never had or has any authority over any individual JW. Letters that are written to individual JW's are directions but cannot be used as evidence of authority. There are many posters on this forum who have received a letter from the congregation letterhead inviting them to a judicial committee. Are people obligated to attend the JC? Nope. Reason: WT doesn't have any authority over you.
Any authority that exists is what a person gives to them. If Gerrit Losch wakes up like Ray Franz, he can just get up, pack his bags and leave Warwick without any obligation to attend any JC.
Losch was a member of the Governing Body, which doesn't have legal existence, while the Watchtower Society, which has a legal existence, doesn't make policy decisions. And an individual JW is neither a member of the GB or the WT.
Zalkin couldn't prove the relation between Losch and the WT, he couldn't prove that Losch received compensation or tangible benefits from the WT, neither could he prove that Watchtower had any legal authority to command Losch, or for that matter any authority. The appeals court categorically said that the lower court erred in this matter.
All I could say that Losch came out of this legal bungle because Zalkin did not do his homework properly. No one could prove that Losch lied.
You can say that Losch had a moral responsibility. But then, what place does morality have in the law? None.
Paul invoked his Roman citizenship to escape scourging. Jesus refused to answer when he was brought before Herod. The apostles defied the Sanhedrin's order. Losch is simply following the example of his anointed colleagues.