Steve Wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, May 05, 1998 9:03 PM
Subject: Prison time for email threats


>This NEWS.COM (http://www.news.com/) story has been sent to you from
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>
>Prison time for email threats
>By Courtney Macavinta
>May 4, 1998, 4:05 p.m. PT
>http://www.news.com/News/Item/0%2C4%2C21766%2C00.html?sas.mail
>
>The first Net user found guilty of an online hate crime--where death
threats were sent by email to 59 Asian university students--was sentenced to
one year in prison today, time that already has been served.
>
>  A jury  convicted  former University of California at Irvine student
Richard Machado, 21, on two counts of federal civil rights violations in
February.
>
>  In 1996, Machado was accused of sending an email to a group of fellow
students, most of whom were Asian, threatening to "...make it my life career
to find and kill every one of you personally." The email, sent  from a
campus computer, allegedly was signed "Asian Hater."
>
>  The verdict validated the prosecution's argument that sending threats via
the Net is the same as doing it over a phone or through the regular mail.
>
>  Initially, Machado was charged with ten counts of civil rights law
violations, but his first trial ended in mistrial after the jury deadlocked.
After the second jury found him guilty, Machado faced a year in federal
prison and a $100,000 fine.
>
>  Today, U.S. District Judge Alicemarie Stotler sentenced Machado, who has
been detained since February 1997, to time served.
>
>  The judge did not order Machado pay the steep fine nor did she grant the
prosecution's request that Machado be cut off from the Net, his public
defender, Sylvia Torres-Guillen, said today.
>
>  "The court didn't impose the outrageous condition the government had
asked  for, which was that Richard Machado not be allowed to use a computer,
modem, online service, cell phone, or TV with Internet or Web [access], and
that he not send any unsolicited email to any recipient," Torres-Guillen
added.
>
>  Machado's defense team had argued that the email was a "stupid prank" and
that so-called flames, or abusive messages, are commonplace within Internet
culture and discussions.
>
>  But during the six-day trial in Santa Monica, California, the prosecution
maintained that the culture of the Net did not make it a safe haven from
federal laws. Furthermore, the government charged that Machado posed a
serious threat to those he emailed because he allegedly resented their
academic status. He had been reportedly been dismissed from U.C. Irvine for
poor grades just prior to sending the threat from a campus computer.
>
>  "Making racially motivated death threats--whether over the phone, via the
mail, or on the Internet--is a federal offense that can bring stiff
penalties," Nora Manella, U.S. Attorney  for the Central District of
California, said in a statement.
>
>  Manella added her office currently is investigating allegations of a
similar offense at California State University at Los Angeles.
>
>
>
>
>-------------------------------------------------------
>


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