|
In another significant victory for Washingtons anti-Spam law, a King County Superior Court judge declared that misleading commercial e-mails sent to millions of people violated Washingtons 1998 statute.
The case against Jason Heckel of Salem, Ore., was the first filed by the Attorney Generals Office under the states 1998 Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act, which prohibits e-mail that contains deceptive subject lines, misrepresents the e-mails point of origin or uses a third partys domain name without permission.
The case was to go to trial in late September, but Judge Douglas North decided no disputed facts existed in the case, meaning a trial was not necessary. A hearing to determine the amount of damages Heckel will be required to pay will be held later this fall.
Under the statute, Heckel could be ordered to pay $500 per violation.
The state law prohibiting certain unsolicited commercial e-mail, or Spam, was enacted in 1998, and Gregoire sued Heckel later that year. In March 2000, another King County Superior Court judge ruled the law unconstitutional, but that decision was later overturned by the Washington Supreme Court. Heckel than asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision, but it declined.
This is one of the few tools consumers have to fight e-mail Spam. Im pleased that courts at all levels have validated this law, Gregoire said.
In the lawsuit, state attorneys accused Heckel, and his company, Natural Instincts, of violating the anti-Spam law by sending unsolicited commercial e-mails to millions of Internet users. The e-mails were aimed at selling a booklet titled, How to Profit from the Internet.
The lawsuit alleged that Heckel used a misleading subject line that read, Did I get the right e-mail address? to entice recipients to download and read his entire message. The suit also alleged that Heckel posted an invalid return e-mail address to which recipients were unable to respond. |