- Related Stories
-
Court deals blow to dating-service spammer
August 3, 2005 -
Marketers falling short on Can-Spam, study says
April 21, 2004 -
Congress OKs antispam legislation
December 8, 2003
The case centered on allegations that the three distributed bulk e-mail advertising pornographic Web sites and containing explicit images of adults having sex. The unsolicited e-mails may have numbered in the tens of millions, the Justice Department said.
The grand jury issued indictments against former Arizona resident Jennifer R. Clason, 32; Jeffrey A. Kilbride, 39, of California; and James R. Schaffer, 39, of Arizona.
A fourth person involved in the case, Andrew Ellifson, 31, pleaded guilty last February to one count under the Can-Spam Act and one count of criminal conspiracy. His conviction marked the first related to the distribution of obscene spam e-mails, the department said.
The defendants allegedly sent the spam to earn commissions and configured the e-mails to make it difficult to ascertain the identity of the sender by falsifying the "from" line in e-mails and sending the spam from Internet Protocol addresses registered in the Netherlands while the domain names were registered in Mauritius.
Federal investigators noted that from January through June of 2004, America Online received more than 600,000 complaints regarding obscene e-mail that allegedly had been sent by the defendants. Investigators also pointed to data collected by Spamhaus, a nonprofit agency, that they say shows the defendants' operation to be among the 200 largest in the world and one that may have generated tens of millions of unsolicited bulk e-mails.
A nine-count indictment was issued to the three defendants. Each was indicted on two counts of fraud under the Can-Spam Act and one count of criminal conspiracy. Under the Can-Spam Act, it is illegal to distribute unsolicited commercial bulk e-mail.
Two of the defendants, Kilbride and Schaffer, also were indicted on two counts of interstate transportation of obscene material using a computer service, two counts of interstate transportation of obscene material and one count of money laundering.
"The Internet is both a blessing and a curse. Unwanted e-mail and pornography in our houses represents a kind of home invasion," Paul Charlton, U.S. Attorney of the Arizona District, said in a statement.
See more CNET content tagged:
CAN-SPAM Act, count, defendant, Arizona, transportation






- Good 1st Step But...
- by malabrm1 August 28, 2005 2:15 PM PDT
- sadly the prevelance of spam isn't at all confined to porn site re-directors. Targetting porn was a good first step to keep kids away from stuff they shouldn't be exposed to. But the fact is that the lion's share of spam starts with advertizing servers using AI algorithms to target what they presume are a person's interests with the result that if for example you go to a sports website to check the football standings, you wind up with a ton of gambling spam in your inbox. Idiot AI programs dished out by fully legal advertising servers are the major culprit that needs attacking. And this will not be an easy challenge for government to address.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(8 Comments)