Re: Top Spammer Arrested; Watch for Decrease in Spam Mail

By GENE JOHNSON, AP Legal Affairs Writer

> A 27-year-old man described as one of the world's most prolific > spammers was arrested Wednesday, and federal authorities said computer > users across the Web could notice a decrease in the amount of junk > e-mail. > Robert Alan Soloway is accused of using networks of compromised > "zombie" computers to send out millions upon millions of spam e-mails. > "He's one of the top 10 spammers in the world," said Tim Cranton, a > Microsoft Corp. lawyer who is senior director of the company's > Worldwide Internet Safety Programs. "He's a huge problem for our > customers. This is a very good day." > A federal grand jury last week returned a 35-count indictment against > Soloway charging him with mail fraud, wire fraud, e-mail fraud, > aggravated identity theft and money laundering. > Soloway pleaded not guilty Wednesday afternoon to all charges after a > judge determined that -- even with four bank accounts seized by the > government -- he was sufficiently well off to pay for his own lawyer. > He has been living in a ritzy apartment and drives an expensive > Mercedes convertible, said prosecutor Kathryn Warma. Prosecutors are > seeking to have him forfeit $773,000 they say he made from his > business, Newport Internet Marketing Corp. > A public defender who represented him for Wednesday's hearing declined > to comment. > Prosecutors say Soloway used computers infected with malicious code to > send out millions of junk e-mails since 2003. The computers are called > "zombies" because owners typically have no idea their machines have > been infected. > He continued his activities even after Microsoft won a $7 million > civil judgment against him in 2005 and the operator of a small > Internet service provider in Oklahoma won a $10 million judgment, > prosecutors said. > U.S. Attorney Jeff Sullivan said Wednesday that the case is the first > in the country in which federal prosecutors have used identity theft > statutes to prosecute a spammer for taking over someone else's > Internet domain name. Soloway could face decades in prison, though > prosecutors said they have not calculated what guideline sentencing > range he might face. > The investigation began when the authorities began receiving hundreds > of complaints about Soloway, who had been featured on a list of known > spammers kept by The Spamhaus Project, an international anti-spam > organization. > The Santa Barbara County, Calif., Department of Social Services said > it was spending $1,000 a week to fight the spam it was receiving, and > other businesses and individuals complained of having their > reputations damaged when it appeared spam was originating from their > computers. > "This is not just a nuisance. This is way beyond a nuisance," Warma > said. > Soloway used the networks of compromised computers to send out > unsolicited bulk e-mails urging people to use his Internet marketing > company to advertise their products, authorities said. > People who clicked on a link in the e-mail were directed to his Web > site. There, Soloway advertised his ability to send out as many as 20 > million e-mail advertisements over 15 days for $495, the indictment > said. > The Spamhaus Project rejoiced at his arrest. > "Soloway has been a long-term nuisance on the Internet -- both in > terms of the spam he sent, and the people he duped to use his spam > service," organizers wrote on Spamhaus.org. > Soloway remained in federal detention pending a hearing Monday. > Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

I think they should shoot him and posted a picture of his dead body on the net!!!!

The Only Good Spammer is a Dead one!! Have you hunted one down today? (c) 2007 I Kill Spammers, Inc. A Rot In Hell Co.

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Steven Lichter
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