You've Got Prison
Spammer gets nine years. What, the gas chamber was full?
Spamming is a crime. Severe sentencing might give American spammers pause. Unfortunately, it might also merely increase offshore spamming, since the international community is too busy seeking ways to prosecute American soldiers and political leaders than to deal with this kind of fraud.
A man convicted in the nation's first felony case against illegal spamming was sentenced to nine years in prison Friday for bombarding Internet users with millions of junk e-mails.
However, Loudoun County Circuit Judge Thomas Horne delayed the start of Jeremy Jaynes' prison term while the case is appealed, saying the law is new and raises constitutional questions.
A jury had recommended the nine-year term for the Raleigh, N.C., man.
Jaynes, 30, who was considered among the top 10 spammers in the world at the time of his arrest, used the Internet to peddle pornography and sham products and services such as a "FedEx refund processor," prosecutors said. Thousands of people fell for his e-mails, and prosecutors said Jaynes' operation grossed up to $750,000 per month.
Spamming is a crime. Severe sentencing might give American spammers pause. Unfortunately, it might also merely increase offshore spamming, since the international community is too busy seeking ways to prosecute American soldiers and political leaders than to deal with this kind of fraud.

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