By Erika Morphy E-Commerce Times
09/12/08 2:39 PM PT
The Virginia Supreme Court has declared the state's antispam law unconstitutional, turning loose a notorious spammer who had been sentenced to nine years in prison for violating it. The law did not distinguish sufficiently between protected and unprotected speech, the Court found.
Jeremy Jaynes -- said to be one of the world's most prolific spammers -- had his nine-year prison sentence vacated after the Virginia state Supreme Court ruled that the law under which he was prosecuted violated the First Amendment.
The state's antispam law,
the Court found, did not adequately differentiate between commercial and noncommercial speech.
Overly Broad
In fact, Jaynes mounted a number of legal challenges to his sentence, including the assertion that the state of Virginia did not have jurisdiction over him because the e-mails were sent from his home in North Carolina.
The court shot down that argument, along with other objections based on legal technicalities, but it ultimately found that the Virginia statute outlawing spam was unconstitutional because it was overly broad.
Virginia's antispam law outlawed sending unsolicited bulk e-mail using false information, such as a phony Internet protocol address. Jaynes' attorney argued that the wording of the statute violated the First Amendment protection of anonymous speech.
However, speech can be classified as "commercial" or "noncommercial"; Jaynes' missives clearly fell in the former category.
"Noncommercial speech is given broader protection under the First Amendment," Randy M. Friedberg, a partner in Olshan Grundman Frome Rosenzweig & Wolosky, told the E-Commerce Times.
It might follow that if Jaynes -- or any spammer -- had been sending mass e-mails to strangers promoting political or religious views, he would have been protected under the First Amendment; since he wasn't, the antispam statute should therefore have applied to him.
However, Jaynes' attorney argued that because Virginia's antispam law could potentially affect protected speech, Jaynes was entitled to claim protection -- and thus exoneration from prosecution -- for his otherwise unprotected speech.
The Court agreed, striking down the statute.
"There is a long line of case authority which states that commercial speech received a lower level of First Amendment protection and higher scrutiny that noncommercial speech," Friedberg said.
"What the Court here decided was that the law was a per se violation of the First Amendment because it did not differentiate, even though the defendant at issue did not argue that anything he sent out was noncommercial."
A Reminder for Lawmakers
The decision is a lesson for legislatures crafting laws that might touch upon the First Amendment, Ronald Schechtman, managing partner with
Pryor Cashman, told the E-Commerce Times.
"It is a reminder that courts hold [lawmakers] to a requirement that any limitation on speech must be drawn in the most narrow fashion possible to meet a legitimate need," he said.
The Virginia Supreme Court made the same observation in its ruling:
"Many other states have regulated unsolicited bulk e-mail but, unlike Virginia, have restricted such regulation to commercial e-mails," the Opinion states. "There is nothing in the record or arguments of the parties, however, suggesting that unsolicited noncommercial bulk e-mails were the target of this legislation, caused increased costs to the Internet service providers, or were otherwise a focus of the problem sought to be addressed by the General Assembly through its enactment of [the antispam law].
"Jaynes does not contest the Commonwealth's interest in controlling unsolicited commercial bulk e-mail as well as fraudulent or otherwise illegal e-mail," it continues. "Nevertheless, [the law] is not limited to instances of commercial or fraudulent transmission of e-mail, nor is it restricted to transmission of illegal or otherwise unprotected speech such as pornography or defamation speech. Therefore, viewed under the strict scrutiny standard, [it] is not narrowly tailored to protect the compelling interests advanced by the Commonwealth."
Yahoo Calls On Outside Devs to Knock Down a Few Walls September 12, 2008
Now that Microsoft is no longer breathing down its neck and its shareholders' tempers have stopped flaring, Yahoo is refocusing its energy on the chase for Internet eyeballs. The company announced plans for a major update to its portal that will open it up to third-party content. The idea is to get more people to use Yahoo as their home base and to stick around longer.
Related Stories
The Spam World's Election Season Blast July 25, 2008
Spammers and phishers are apparently keeping up well with current events, using the public's interest in the presidential race to lure people into malicious Web sites from which they can install malware and swipe personal info. Also, many spammers have taken to using free hosting sites rather than running their own.
The Storm Worm's Elaborate Con Game June 11, 2008
Security researchers at Cisco's IronPort say they've pieced together the complex con operation behind the Storm Worm, a persistent Web threat. The botnet's purpose, they say, was essentially to act as a virtual dealer of prescription -- and often bogus -- medication, sometimes enlisting work-from-home employees who thought they were doing legitimate tasks.
MySpace's $230M Victory in Spam Case May Be Hollow May 15, 2008
MySpace won a court award of $230 million against a couple of notorious spammers, but it's probable that the social networking giant won't see a dime of it. Still, it raises the volume in the spam wars, alerting other e-commerce operations to the need to tighten their security -- and giving users another elbow in the ribs over careless clicking.
More by Erika Morphy
Twitter Flies the Coop March 16, 2010
Twitter has found a way to flit around to other Web locales through a feature called "@anywhere." Amazon, eBay, The Huffington Post, YouTube and others will be able to open a Twitter window to users, allowing them to send and receive messages without leaving the site. Social media marketers are salivating at the possibilities.
Pegasystems' Chordiant Buy Not Without Risks March 16, 2010
Pegasystems' acquisition of Chordiant could lead to a merging of the companies' synergies, resulting in an Oracle-type solution at a lower cost. Or, it could lead to conflicts over philosophical perspectives and infighting over which technology to keep and which to let go, ultimately derailing the integration.
Google Poised to Make Good on Its China Threat March 15, 2010
Negotiations between Google and China over Web censorship have apparently failed to produce a compromise that both sides could agree to. Although no official announcement has been made, all signs are pointing in the direction of Google's imminent withdrawal of its search operations from the country.