FYI - As a reminder, please do not hijack the use of address blocks issued to 
other parties.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


Begin forwarded message:

Spammers Plead Guilty, Company Forfeits $4.9 Million

NEWS RELEASE SUMMARYgg – June 10, 2022
SAN DIEGO – Three employees of the affiliate marketing platform Amobee pleaded 
guilty in federal court today to hijacking Internet Protocol (IP) addresses to 
send unsolicited commercial email messages, commonly known as “spam.”

The three employees, Jacob Bychak, Mark Manoogian, and Abdul Mohammed Qayyum, 
joined Daniel Dye and Vincent Tarney in pleading guilty to violating the 
federal CAN-SPAM statute for their involvement in misusing the stolen IP 
addresses to send spam.

The defendants’ employer, formerly known as both Adconion Direct Inc. and 
Frontline Direct (hereafter, “Adconion”), previously agreed to forfeit 
$4,939,526 as the fraudulent proceeds of a wire fraud conspiracy in which its 
employees hijacked more than 500,000 IP addresses to send over 10 billion 
commercial emails to people in the United States and elsewhere.

IP addresses are the beginning and ending points for sending data via the 
internet. A discrete bundle of IP addresses in numeric order is known as a 
range or block. In this case, the defendants pleaded guilty to using fraudulent 
Letters of Authorization (“LOAs”) to take control of large blocks of IP 
addresses registered to eleven different entities without the registrants’ 
knowledge or consent. As part of the fraudulent scheme, the defendants used 
email accounts set up to impersonate the IP blocks’ true registrants. In 
particular, the defendants used and created email addresses with the true 
registrants’ domain name (e.g., ect.net) to impersonate real and fictitious 
employees. They then emailed the fraudulent LOAs, which were written on fake 
letterheads and included forged signatures, from these imposter email accounts 
to various Internet hosting companies to falsely represent to the hosting 
companies that the true registrants authorized them to use the IP addresses.

All the IP blocks hijacked by the defendants were IPv4 addresses. Demand for a 
finite number of IPv4 addresses available has driven up their value over time. 
Between December 2010 and September 2014, when the defendants’ conduct 
occurred, a block of 65,534 IP addresses, referred to as a Class B block, was 
worth approximately $650,000. Today, it is worth as much as $3.3 million. 
Internet Service Providers like Yahoo and Google routinely employ filters to 
block spam from reaching a recipient’s inbox. Once an IP address is associated 
with spam, the filters typically block messages sent from that IP address. 
Spammers need a constant supply of fresh unblocked IP addresses to deliver the 
unwanted commercial email.

The defendants’ jobs with Adconion were to acquire fresh IP addresses and 
employ other measures to circumvent the spam filters. To conceal Adconion’s 
ties to the stolen IP addresses and the spam sent from these IP addresses, the 
defendants used a host of DBAs, virtual addresses, and fake names provided by 
the company. While defendants touted ties to well-known name brands, the email 
marketing campaigns associated with the hijacked IP addresses included 
advertisements such as “BigBeautifulWomen,” “iPhone4S Promos,” and 
“LatinLove[Cost-per-Click].”

Today’s guilty pleas arise from an October 2018 indictment for which trial 
began on May 23, 2022. Following opening statements, the trial was interrupted 
by the recent COVID surge and had yet to resume. In exchange for misdemeanor 
pleas, the defendants have each agreed to admit their involvement in the 
scheme, to undertake 100 hours of community service, and to pay a maximum 
$100,000 fine.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation with 
assistance provided by the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of 
Justice’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section.

“The defendants generated millions of dollars for their company by high-jacking 
hundreds of thousands of IP addresses, enabling them to illegally inundate 
consumers with over 10 billion email ads,” said U.S. Attorney Randy Grossman. 
““This case was the first in the nation to charge violations of the CAN-SPAM 
Act’s provision against using hijacked IP addresses to send spam. We are 
committed to using all the tools at our disposal to protect the internet and 
everyone who depends on it.” Grossman thanked the prosecution team as well as 
the investigating agencies, the American Registry of Internet Numbers, Yahoo, 
The Spamhaus Project, and The National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance.

“These defendants spent years illegally sending billions of spam emails 
nationwide which made millions of dollars,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge 
Stacey Moy. “The FBI remains committed to pursuing these criminal conspiracies, 
no matter how long it takes, and holding them accountable in a court of law. I 
want to thank the United States Attorney’s Office for their ongoing support and 
partnership in bringing this case to an end.”

The defendants are scheduled to be sentenced on October 3, 2022, at 10:30 a.m. 
before U.S. District Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel.

DEFENDANTS                                             Case Number 18cr4683-GPC
Jacob Bychak                          Age: 36                                   
Carlsbad, CA
Mark Manoogian                    Age: 39                                   
Carlsbad, CA
Abdul Mohammed Qayyum   Age: 40                                   Oceanside, CA

SUMMARY OF CHARGES

CAN-SPAM – Title 18, U.S.C., Section 1037(a)(5) and (b)(3)
Maximum penalty: One year in custody and $100,000 fine

AGENCIES

Federal Bureau of Investigation
Internal Revenue Service


Kelly Thornton
Director of Media Relations
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of California
619.546.9726
Follow us on Twitter @SDCAnews

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