Simple clear advice in plain English

US spammer facing nine years in jail

North Carolina man amassed $24m through bulk email scams

A US judge has handed down a jail sentence to a US spammer recommending that he stay behind bars for nine years.

Jeremy Jaynes, 30, one half of a sibling spam duo, was convicted under Virginia state law which forbids sending bulk emails using fake addresses.

He was found guilty of sending hundreds of thousands of spam messages to AOL subscribers, and was described by prosecutors as "the equivalent of snake oil salesmen".

It is believed that with the help of his sister, Jessica DeGroot, 28, who was fined $7,500, the duo pedalled non-existent products via email such as a 'FedEx refund processor' that supposedly allowed people to earn $75 an hour while working from home.

This allowed the siblings, both based in Raleigh, North Carolina, to amass a fortune of $24m. "This was just a case of fraud," said state prosecutor Samuel Fishel.

Jamie Cowper, senior technology consultant and anti-spam expert at messaging specialist Mirapoint, said that the punishment ought to fit the crime.

"While there may be an outcry in some quarters over a sentence of nine years for spam, this recommendation needs to be seen in context," he said.

"[They] have defrauded thousands of people to the tune of $24m, hardly an insignificant amount of money. Plain and simple, this man is a serial criminal preying on susceptible individuals using the internet in good faith.

"We are happy to hand down hefty sentences to con artists that dupe OAPs through more 'traditional' methods of deception. Why should Jaynes be treated any differently?"

Reader Comments

   

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Related articles

Phishing for your money takes a new twist

Fraudsters are trying to recruit UK computer users as money launderers

phishing-credit-card

Police arrest cyber criminals over student loan thefts

Two men charged with conspiracy to defraud over phishing scam

actionfraud

Fraudsters selling dangerous energy saving devices to UK consumers

Trading Standards warns people being conned by phone calls again

Question & Answer

Q.Can I log on to Facebook after I've moved from Googlemail...

> Read the answer

Q.How do I store musician and other information about...

> Read the answer

Q.Why can't my browser find the website address I typed...

> Read the answer

Best deals on the web

img

Apple iMac 21.5" (MC309)

£928.60- Buy it now

img

Dell Inspiron 620 ST Intel Core i3-2100 3.10GHz / 3GB / 500GB / DVDRW / Win 7 Home Premium

£299.00- Buy it now

img

Dell Inspiron 620 (D006250)

£349.00- Buy it now

Great benefits for subscribers!

Most popular articles

soca

RnBxclusive users busy deleting download history says SOCA

Since law-enforcement agency has taken down a site alleged to illegally host RnB music, downloaders have been busy trying to delete their online footprints

Poll

Which is your preferred web browser

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

CPU

Central Processing Unit. Another term for a computer processor.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive