In Jaynes v. Commonwealth of Virginia (decided September 12, 2008), the Supreme Court of Virginia reversed the felony conviction of notorious spammer Jeremy Jaynes, as well as its own earlier decision upholding Jaynes’ conviction. Jaynes appealed his conviction on two principle grounds: first, that the Virginia trial court lacked personal jurisdiction, since he had conducted all his spamming activities in Raleigh, North Carolina; and second, that the statute restricted the First Amendment right to anonymous speech, and therefore was invalid. The court rejected Jaynes’ argument on jurisdiction, but reversed the conviction on the ground that the underlying statute was overbroad in violation of the First Amendment. As Justice Agee writing for the majority observed, the statute was drafted in such a way that “were the Federalist Papers just being published today via e-mail, that transmission by Publius would violate the statute.”
Jaynes v. Commonwealth of Virginia
Published in Tuesday, October 10, 2008, Volume 6, No. 1