US 'spam king' arrested

01 Jun 2007

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A man accused of being one of the globe's top 10 most prolific spammers has been arrested.

Robert Soloway, 27, from Seattle, Washington, appeared in a US court yesterday, accused of a series mail fraud, email fraud, aggravated identity theft and money laundering.

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Mr Soloway has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

Prosecutors say Mr Soloway became one of the world's biggest spammers, using botnets – networks of private computers infected with malware - to send out spam from 2003.

It is the first time federal prosecutors have used identity theft laws to prosecute a spammer for taking over someone else's internet domain name, theoretically leaving Mr Soloway facing a long prison sentence.

Prosecutor Kathryn Warma said authorities were seeking to seize $773,550 (£391,000) they believe Mr Soloway made from his business, Newport Internet Marketing Corp.

Mr Soloway continued his activities even after Microsoft won a £3.5m civil judgment against him in 2005, and the operator of a small internet service provider in Oklahoma won a £5m judgment, prosecutors said.

If convicted of all the charges, he faces a fine of $250,000 (£126,500) and a maximum prison term of 65 years.

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