§ 7703. Prohibition against predatory and abusive commercial e-mail
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(a)Omitted
(b)United States Sentencing Commission
(1)Directive Pursuant to its authority under section 994(p) of title 28 and in accordance with this section, the United States Sentencing Commission shall review and, as appropriate, amend the sentencing guidelines and policy statements to provide appropriate penalties for violations of section 1037 of title 18, as added by this section, and other offenses that may be facilitated by the sending of large quantities of unsolicited electronic mail.
(2)Requirements In carrying out this subsection, the Sentencing Commission shall consider providing sentencing enhancements for—
(A)those convicted under section 1037 of title 18 who—
(i)obtained electronic mail addresses through improper means, including—
(I)harvesting electronic mail addresses of the users of a website, proprietary service, or other online public forum operated by another person, without the authorization of such person; and
(II)randomly generating electronic mail addresses by computer; or
(ii)knew that the commercial electronic mail messages involved in the offense contained or advertised an Internet domain for which the registrant of the domain had provided false registration information; and
(B)those convicted of other offenses, including offenses involving fraud, identity theft, obscenity, child pornography, and the sexual exploitation of children, if such offenses involved the sending of large quantities of electronic mail.
(c)Sense of Congress It is the sense of Congress that—
(1)Spam has become the method of choice for those who distribute pornography, perpetrate fraudulent schemes, and introduce viruses, worms, and Trojan horses into personal and business computer systems; and
(2)the Department of Justice should use all existing law enforcement tools to investigate and prosecute those who send bulk commercial e-mail to facilitate the commission of Federal crimes, including the tools contained in chapters 47 and 63 of title 18 (relating to fraud and false statements); chapter 71 of title 18 (relating to obscenity); chapter 110 of title 18 (relating to the sexual exploitation of children); and chapter 95 of title 18 (relating to racketeering), as appropriate.
(Pub. L. 108–187, § 4, Dec. 16, 2003, 117 Stat. 2703.)
Connections13 cite this · traces to 3
Cited by 13 sections
U.S. Code
statute-compilations
bill
- Sec. 6Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 7Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 7Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 6Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 6Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 3Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 4Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 6Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 6Use of term child sexual abuse material
- Sec. 205Use of term child sexual abuse material
4 references not yet in our index
- Pub. L. 108–187, § 4
- 117 Stat. 2703
- section 4 of Pub. L. 108–187
- section 16 of Pub. L. 108–187
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cites case law
§ 7703
Prohibition against predatory and abusive commercial e-mail
Bills×10
Stat. Comp.×1
Stat.×1
U.S.C.×1
Pub. L.Pub. L. 108–187, § 4
Stat.117 Stat. 2703
Pub. L.section 4 of Pub. L. 108–187
Pub. L.section 16 of Pub. L. 108–187
Cites 7Cited by 13 across 4 sources