Court Upholds Tough Anti-Spam Law
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, June 30, 2004
SEATTLE An appeals court upheld the state's tough
anti-spam law in a closely watched case against a man who claimed
he did not know some of his e-mail was going to residents of Washington.
The unanimous ruling by a three-judge panel of the Washington
Court of Appeals rejected an appeal by Jason Heckel of Salem, Ore.,
doing business as Natural Instincts and promoting a "How to Profit
From the Internet" package for $39.95.
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The case, filed in 1998, was the first under Washington's law
against unsolicited junk e-mail. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused
to consider a claim that the state law violated the U.S.
Constitution's clause on interstate commerce.
Federal anti-spam legislation went into effect Jan. 1, and
leading Internet companies have sued hundreds of people accused of
violating it.
Monday's state appellate decision upheld a 2002 decision
ordering Heckel to pay nearly $100,000 in fines and court costs.
Heckel never disputed sending hundreds of thousands of e-mail
solicitations a month but claimed that the state should have
been required to prove that he knew specific addressees were residents of Washington.
Under that interpretation, "no spammer sending deceptive e-mail
could ever violate the act as long as he were to use a bulk e-mail
program to harvest large numbers of addresses without regard to
residence of the owners," Judge Faye C. Kennedy wrote for the
panel.
Heckel's lawyer, Dale L. Crandall, said he had not decided
whether to appeal. "These are complex issues," he said.
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