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Juicy D. Links 08-23-2005 03:24 PM

CRIME: Minnesota man made millions in his 20s pushing prescriptions and electronics o
 
http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/du...printstory.jsp


The man behind the spam
CRIME: Minnesota man made millions in his 20s pushing prescriptions and electronics on the Internet.
BY STEVE KARNOWSKI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BURNSVILLE, Minn. - Christopher Smith's neighbors didn't know exactly what he did for a living. But they knew well that he liked to collect expensive cars and set off fireworks at all hours.

At an age when most of his peers could barely afford a new car, Smith was amassing a collection that would include BMWs, Hummers, a Ferrari, a Jaguar and a Lamborghini. And when other 20-somethings were trying to save for down payments on modest starter homes, Smith paid $1.1 million for a house in a more affluent suburb.

Smith got all that through his successes in massive unsolicited e-mail marketing, authorities say. The Spamhaus Project, an anti-spam group, considered him one of the world's worst offenders.

He was just 25 when the feds in May shut down his flagship company, Xpress Pharmacy Direct, and seized $1.8 million in luxury cars, two homes and $1.3 million in cash held by Smith and associates.

But even then, prosecutors say, he refused to give up.

They say he tried to relaunch his online pharmacy from an offshore haven -- the Dominican Republic -- intending to build his business back up to $4.1 million in sales by its second month, right where it was before.

Brian McWilliams, author of "Spam Kings," said young people like Smith aren't unusual in the fast-buck world of spammers.

"A lot of them are guys who haven't had success anywhere else in life, but they find this easy money to be made in the spam trade," he said. "They don't want to give it up."

Authorities were waiting when Smith flew back to Minneapolis in late June.

Smith remains free on bail as he awaits another hearing Thursday on contempt-of-court charges for which prosecutors are seeking six months in jail. He also faces a grand jury investigation of his e-mail businesses, which could lead to more charges and potentially longer sentences.

The high school dropout, operating under the nickname Rizler, got his start in the late 1990s, selling police radar and laser jammers. Along the way he added cable TV descramblers and other products.

After Time Warner Cable got an injunction in 2002 putting Smith out of the descrambler business, he diversified and generated more than $18 million in sales from drugs online, including the often-abused narcotic painkiller Vicodin, without obtaining proper prescriptions, federal prosecutors say.

Smith's former neighbors in a hilly, heavily wooded part of Burnsville were glad to see him go after he moved to pricier, more secluded digs in Prior Lake, Minn., over the winter.

Sue Parson said things began to get out of hand in May 2004. When her husband complained about loud fireworks, she said, Smith's response was: "Too bad. We can set them off if we want to." Not long after one complaint, someone set off fireworks at the foot of the Parsons' driveway early one morning, she said.

Neighbors didn't know exactly what Smith did for a living. Parson said he told one person he had a lawn service, another that he was "into computers" and yet another that he was "into pharmaceuticals."

"There were these Hummers outside, the limos outside," she said. "It was like, 'Where do these people get their money from?' "

Just four days after a federal judge put Xpress Pharmacy Direct into receivership, Smith made what prosecutors say was a brazen play to stay in business.

Smith took off for the Dominican Republic and went to work setting up a new online pharmacy and call center, where prosecutors say he hoped he'd be safe from extradition and out of the reach of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Former employees, his wife and even his girlfriend brought or sent Smith "substantial sums of cash" there, and one former employee passed him a disk with data on more than 100,000 Xpress Pharmacy customers, court documents and testimony allege.

Smith even managed to withdraw some money from an account that was supposed to be frozen. He also launched two new Web sites, the documents allege.

In the Dominican Republic, Smith was a guest of Creaghan Harry, a man the government described as another notorious spammer.

According to the court documents, Harry, who runs a call center there, earned more than $2 million from Smith for telemarketing.

Harry said the call center he manages, Santo Domingo-based Americas Best Worldwide, was just one of many that took orders for Smith. He said it had no other connection with Smith's new business.

"We basically got pulled in to this because Chris Smith decided to come down here," Harry said. "But we are not his company or even his call center. Taking pharmaceutical orders is only a small part of our business."

Harry acknowledged that Smith had stayed in his Santo Domingo apartment for a week in early June.

Though Smith mentioned over a few lunches in Santo Domingo that he planned to start up a new business, he didn't offer details, Harry said.

Whether it was a business trip or vacation, it ended with Smith going straight to jail when he returned to Minnesota.

Authorities arrested him on a contempt-of-court warrant and said in court last month that they plan to seek unspecified criminal charges against him. Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicole Engisch told U.S. District Judge Michael Davis a grand jury has been hearing evidence against Smith and others she did not name. She said she did not know when indictments might come down, nor did she say what the charges might be.

Smith and his stepfather declined to comment on his legal troubles as he left the courthouse the next day after his release on $50,000 bail. Prosecutors also declined to comment on the case, citing the ongoing investigation.

As Smith sat in Davis' courtroom, wearing orange jail garb and flashing an occasional forlorn smile at his father and wife, high-profile local defense lawyer Joe Friedberg conceded that Smith had violated the judge's May 20 injunction by taking $2,000 from a frozen account.

But Friedberg contends the government hasn't proven that anything else Smith did in the Dominican Republic was illegal.

As Davis freed Smith on bail, he put him on home monitoring and ordered him to surrender his passports.

And Davis admonished Smith: Stay away from computers and don't set up any more Web sites.

The Ghost 08-23-2005 03:45 PM

I still get a few hundred emails a day pharmacutical stuff.

jacked 08-23-2005 03:51 PM

:1orglaugh thats rough another one bites the dust

killerkay 08-23-2005 03:51 PM

hardcore spammers get rich off keeping it real

venus 08-23-2005 03:58 PM

my spams are down to almost nothing. Since this guy got busted and those sites got busted by the FTC for their affiliates spamming..makes you wonder between these few places how much spam they had been sending out.

Juicy D. Links 08-23-2005 03:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by venus
my spams are down to almost nothing. Since this guy got busted and those sites got busted by the FTC for their affiliates spamming..makes you wonder between these few places how much spam they had been sending out.

Judging by the $$$ amount of revenue i would say alot.

tristan_D 08-23-2005 05:07 PM

every dog has its day.

Doctor Dre 08-23-2005 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by venus
my spams are down to almost nothing. Since this guy got busted and those sites got busted by the FTC for their affiliates spamming..makes you wonder between these few places how much spam they had been sending out.

If you got a good organisation ... one guy can send 1000 times more spam then another one ...

reynold 08-23-2005 06:50 PM

damn, having all the luxury cars at the age of 20--the road to jail will always be so tempting.

reed_4 08-23-2005 06:52 PM

what a lucky spammer.

PixeLs 08-23-2005 10:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by killerkay
hardcore spammers get rich off keeping it real

They are lucky if not caught but totally fucked up if authorities reached them

tony286 08-23-2005 10:52 PM

your doing something shady and you dont move offshore once you start making alittle money you dont move offshore and never come back to US. DUH!

tapatio 08-23-2005 10:56 PM

Check http://spamkings.oreilly.com/


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