Feds Say Missouri Spam Operation Netted Over $4 Million

Written by Sue Walsh on July 20, 2010

Federal authorities say two men accused of running a spam campaign in Columbia Missouri that targeted college students reaped in the profits to the tune of over $4 million.  Investigators say Amir Shah, Osmaan Shah, and Paul Zucker began their spamming activities in 2004. They created programs designed to harvest the email addresses of students at over 2,000 colleges, starting with those at the University of Missouri at Columbia.

The spam messages hawked products such as tooth whiteners and a social networking site called Noog.com and claimed to be from officially authorized campus representatives and alumni owned businesses. To avoid detection they used a bullet proof hosting company in China that ignored take down requests and bought proxies. They also faked the headers and reply-to addresses in their messages, a blatant violation of CAN-SPAM laws. When a college complained, the addresses of their students were simply taken off the list.

The men made their money by both selling the products they offered in their spam messages and by affiliate marketing, using their spam to inflate their referrals. They tried to hide their profits by buying properties and funneling it to overseas accounts.

The Shahs and Zucker were indicted on 35 counts of fraud in connection with email, 6 counts of fraud in connection with a computer, and 1 count of conspiracy. All three charges are felonies and they face over 60 years in prison if convicted. Zucker pleaded guilty last week. The Shahs had originally entered a not guilty plea but were expected to change that to a guilty plea last week, but cancelled their hearing after Zucker pled guilty.

Comments

Andrew July 20, 2010

Isn’t this a story from 2009… http://pcworld.about.com/od/securit1/Four-Indicted-in-Giant-College.htm

Sue Walsh July 22, 2010

Hi Andrew!

Thanks for your comment. The case began in 2009 and is still ongoing. One of the three men entered a guilty plea last week while the other two still have no gone to trial. See more here:

http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2010/07/feds-columbia-spam-operation-made-41-million.html

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