Look -- all our server sent was a standard iMail bounce for a non-existing account -- NOT an account that received the message, called it spam, and returned it to the "sender".
To be technical, IMail was bouncing the E-mail after receiving it (which is bad, but common), as opposed to rejecting it (which is good).
So the core of the problem is that IMail is receiving the E-mail, doing spam scanning, and then bouncing it. If you can get IMail to reject it immediately, the problem goes away. If this is a domain you act as a gateway for, however, I don't believe you can get IMail to do that.
Making it worse is the fact that the spam headers are there, which are going to convince most people (incorrectly, in this case) that the reason for the bounce was that the E-mail was spam.
-Scott
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