Va. Court Voids Spam Law

Statute violated First Amendment rights; man who sent 10M emails daily can go free
By Wesley Oliver,  Newser Staff
Posted Sep 12, 2008 1:32 PM CDT
Va. Court Voids Spam Law
Authorities claimed Jeremy Jaynes sent up to 10 million emails a day from his home in Raleigh, NC. He was sentenced to 9 years in prison.   (Index Stock)

Virginia’s anti-spam laws are unconstitutional because they prohibit behavior shielded by the First Amendment, the state’s supreme court ruled today. The ruling overturns the conviction of Jeremy Jaynes, who received the nation’s first felony spam conviction in 2004, the Richmond Times-Dispatch says. Prosecutors alleged Jaynes sent up to 10 million emails a day from his North Carolina home.

But the court said unanimously the Virginia law went too far, because while barring commercial speech, it also banned the “anonymous transmission of all unsolicited bulk e-mails, including those containing political, religious or other speech” protected by the Constitution. Many states and the federal government all have anti-spam laws, the AP reports. Jaynes had received 9 years in prison. (More spam stories.)

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