On Friday, April 3rd, 28 year old San Diego man Kevin Bollaert was convicted in the San Diego Superior Court and sentenced to 18 years for 27 counts of identity theft and extortion via California’s newly enacted revenge porn law. Additionally, he was ordered to pay $10,000 in restitution. Although Bollaert is not the first to be convicted under California’s new law, his steep sentence is unprecedented. Specifically, Bollaert ran a revenge porn website (called Yougotposted) which allowed vengeful ex-husbands and boyfriends to post nude photos of their ex-girlfriends and link them to the women’s personal social media accounts. Bollaert, a Web developer, posted the pictures and then charged women from $300 to $350 to have the pictures removed. Prosecutors alleged that over 10,000 photos from California and other states were posted on Bollaert’s website between Dec. 2, 2012, and Sept. 17, 2013.
Bollaert faced a maximum of 20 years. In explaining his punishment, the judge noted that he stacked the sentencing terms based on the multiple victims. The hearing took all day, and eight women testified on how they were damaged by Bollaert’s actions. This was the first case of its type in the country, and California was the first state to prosecute someone for posting humiliating pictures online. Above all else, this case is more about online harassment, threats, and extortion.
New Legislation