Jeremy Jaynes (born 1974) is an American entrepreneur and business consultant. Jaynes is best known for some of his earliest online ventures in 2004, that involved the act of e-mail spamming, broadcasting junk e-mail from his home in North Carolina, United States. Jaynes and his business partner, his sister Jessica DeGroot, were the first people in the world to be charged with "felony spam", i.e., sending spam without allegation of any accompanying illegal conduct such as theft, fraud, trespass, defamation, or obscenity.[1][2][3]
Jaynes' acquittal was granted by the Virginia Supreme Court ruling unanimously the law Jaynes was prosecuted under violated the First Amendment. On March 30, 2009, the Supreme Court of the United States refused the Virginia Attorney General's petition for a writ of certiorari to review the decision of the Supreme Court of Virginia overturning the anti-spam statute. Jaynes never served any of his prison sentence for the overturned conviction. DeGroot was ordered to pay a fine of US$7,500.[4]
Personal life
Jeremy Jaynes attended high school in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. His father was a professor of genetic engineering at Louisiana State University. He currently lives and works just outside of Raleigh, North Carolina. He is married with 3 children.
See also
References
- ↑ "Spammer sentenced to 9 years". NBC News. 2005-04-08. Retrieved 2023-07-28.
- ↑ "Virginia indicts two on spam felony charges - Dec. 12, 2003". CNN. Retrieved 2023-07-28.
- ↑ Low, Valentine (2012-04-13). "Jail for junk email conman". Evening Standard. Retrieved 2023-07-28.
- ↑ Modine, Austin. "Virginia de-convicts AOL junk mailer Jeremy Jaynes". The Register. Retrieved 2023-07-28.
External links
- https://jeremyjaynes.com/
- ALLIANCE NEWSLETTER - 2009 ISSUE 1 p. 10-11 (pdf, archived 03/19/2017)
- https://www.leclairryan.com/news/xprNewsDetail.aspx?xpST=NewsDetail&news=261 (09/17/2008, archived 03/19/2017)
- https://www.leclairryan.com/pubs/xprPubDetail.aspx?xpST=PubDetail&pub=492 (07/06/2009, archived 03/19/2017)
- https://www.leclairryan.com/news/xprNewsDetail.aspx?xpST=NewsDetail&news=239 (06/05/2008, archived 03/19/2017)
- http://www.richmond.com/news/va-high-court-revisits-spam-case/article_0e843ab9-917b-5b4e-be33-1c5df1e7c4d8.html (05/06/2008, seen 2017-03-19)