Sophos

Talk to our experts

Find your local press contact

Resources

Info feeds

What are info feeds?

15 October 2007

"Dirty Duo" sent to jail for sending pornographic spam Gang sent hundreds of thousands of sexually explicit emails

Neon lights
James Schaffer and Jeffrey Kilbride ran an international pornographic spam business.

Experts at IT security and control firm Sophos have welcomed news that two men have been sent to jail for over five years each for their part in an international spam gang which bombarded innocent internet users with sexually explicit images.

A federal judge sentenced Jeffrey A. Kilbride, of Venice, California, to six years in prison and his associate James R. Schaffer of Paradise Valley, Arizona, to five years and three months in jail. The two men were found guilty of charges including violating the CAN-SPAM act, conspiracy, money laundering, fraud and transportation of obscene materials. Kilbride received a higher sentence from US District Judge David G Campbell after the court ruled that he had tried to prevent a government witness from testifying at the trial.

Spam sent by Schaffer and Kilbride resulted in America Online receiving more than 600,000 complaints from users between 30 January and 9 June 2004. The spam messages were sent out to promote hardcore pornographic websites.

The two men used a variety of tricks to try and hide their whereabouts from the US authorities. These included logging in remotely to servers based in Amsterdam to try and make their spam messages look like they originated from outside the USA, and using bank accounts in Mauritius and the Isle of Man.

"Spamming is a big money earner for cybercriminal gangs who have no qualms about swamping email inboxes with offensive messages or breaking into innocent people's PCs," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos. "The authorities have sent a strong message to spammers that their activities will not be tolerated. If you send spam then you are running the gauntlet of spending years locked in a prison cell."

In addition to the jail sentences, each man received a fine of $100,000 and ordered to pay damages to AOL of $77,500. The authorities are also seizing over $1.13 million in revenues gathered by the criminal gang.

Other members of the gang, including work-at-home "mom" Jennifer Clason, Andrew Ellifson of Scottsdale, Arizona, and Kirk Rogers of Manhattan Beach, California, pleaded guilty to charges and turned state's evidence against Kilbride and Schaffer.

More information about the sentencing of Kilbride and Schaffer can be found on the Department of Justice's website.

Sophos recommends companies protect themselves with a consolidated solution which can control network access and defend against the threats of spam, hackers, spyware and viruses.

About Sophos

Sophos enables enterprises all over the world to secure and control their IT infrastructure. Sophos's network access control, endpoint, web and email solutions simplify security to provide integrated defenses against malware, spyware, intrusions, unwanted applications, spam, policy abuse, data leakage and compliance drift. With over 20 years of experience, Sophos protects over 100 million users in nearly 150 countries with its reliably engineered security solutions and services. Recognized for its high level of customer satisfaction and powerful yet easy-to-use solutions, Sophos has received many industry awards, as well as positive reviews and certifications.

Sophos is headquartered in Boston, US and Oxford, UK. More information is available at www.sophos.com

See also: