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spammers face jail time

Sigmund Roid

New member
Taken from CNN.com

I hope they rot in jail for a long time



Siblings convicted in first felony spam case
Thursday, November 4, 2004 Posted: 1450 GMT (2250 HKT)


LEESBURG, Virginia (AP) -- A brother and sister who sent junk e-mail to millions of America Online customers were convicted Wednesday in the nation's first felony prosecution of Internet spam distributors.

Jurors recommended that Jeremy Jaynes be sentenced to nine years in prison and fined Jessica DeGroot $7,500 after convicting them of three counts each of sending e-mails with fraudulent and untraceable routing information.

A third defendant, Richard Rutkowski, 30, was acquitted of similar charges.

The judge was still considering a motion from defense attorneys to set aside the verdict and will hear arguments on it a later date. He had said previously that he had reservations about allowing the case against DeGroot and Rutkowski to go to a jury.

Virginia, where AOL is based, prosecuted the case under a law that took effect last year barring people from sending bulk e-mail that is unsolicited and masks its origin.

Prosecutors said Jaynes, 30, and DeGroot, 28, who live in the Raleigh, North Carolina, area, used the Internet to peddle sham products and services such as a "FedEx refund processor."

The refund processor supposedly allowed people to earn $75 an hour for working from home. In one month alone, Jaynes received 10,000 credit card orders, each for $39.95, for the processor.

"This is a snake oil salesman in a new format," said state prosecutor Samuel E. Fishel IV.

Prosecutors had asked the jury to impose a maximum prison sentence of 15 years for Jaynes and to consider some jail time for his sister.

David Oblon, Jaynes' attorney, argued that it was inappropriate for prosecutors to seek what he called excessive punishment because it was the first time the new law had been prosecuted.

Oblon also said that because his client was a North Carolina resident he would have been unaware of the Virginia law.

Attorney General Jerry W. Kilgore applauded the convictions and called Virginia's anti-spam law the toughest in America.

"Spam is a nuisance to millions of Americans, but it is also a major problem for businesses large and small because the thousands of unwanted e-mails create havoc as they attempt to conduct business," Kilgore said in a statement.
 
Ah that's bullshit. While I hate spammers... they were prosecuted for what they were selling, which was legal, more so than for spamming... but since the way they went about spamming was illegal they snagged them for that..

And they gave them 9 years? 9 FUCKING YEARS!>?????!??!?!?

Peeps get less for rape and murder on a regular basis...


Come on....
 
The Ejaculator said:
Ah that's bullshit. While I hate spammers... they were prosecuted for what they were selling, which was legal, more so than for spamming... but since the way they went about spamming was illegal they snagged them for that..

And they gave them 9 years? 9 FUCKING YEARS!>?????!??!?!?

Peeps get less for rape and murder on a regular basis...


Come on....

When in Rome, do as Romans do ?
 
caveat emptor

...they should prosecute the 10,000 dipshits that shelled-out 40 bucks, along with their credit card number, in reply to some bullshit spam.
 
The Ejaculator said:
How does that apply?

Well they knew their gimmick was illegal (at least the way they did it) so I dont see whats the problem with locking them for 9 years. Sucks but damn, they have picked another country to establish their monkey business.
 
Spam is not a big deal... they need to crack down on people who write spyware or upload it to other peeps. Give them the death penalty.
 
manny78 said:
Well they knew their gimmick was illegal (at least the way they did it) so I dont see whats the problem with locking them for 9 years. Sucks but damn, they have picked another country to establish their monkey business.


Not really.

They weren't residents of virgina, but were prosecuted under laws that Virgina had - you see AOL is the biggest company in that state and had a huge influence on the laws there and on how this case was handled.

Basically - this is coroporate america, specifically AOL, jailing private citizens.

On top of if the prosecutor refered to them as 'Modern Day SnakeOil Salesmen' and was able to bring up the products they sold - which were not illegal - that is completely inflamatory and wasn't relevant to the charges.

I hope they appeal and win.

This was a bullshit case, and it stinks.

Corporate interests throwing people in jail? Bah...
 
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