Background
Cohen was born in Los Angeles and attended Van Nuys High School in the Van Nuys area of Los Los Angeles
Cohen was born in Los Angeles and attended Van Nuys High School in the Van Nuys area of Los Los Angeles
In the 1980s, he operated a paid-membership bulletin board system (Bulletin Board System) called the French Connection, geared toward Swinging and other sexual topics, and by the late 1980s, he organized swinger get-togethers at a home in Orange County, California.
He was also involved in the controversial peer-to-peer service
In 1975, Cohen was convicted of grand theft and check-kiting. In 1990, he was arrested for operating a sex club in a residential zone. He relocated the enterprise and charges were dropped.
In 1991, he was convicted in a bankruptcy fraud scheme in which he forged documents and assumed other identities.
He was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison, and was released on February 1, 1995. Cohen fraudulently obtained the lucrative Internet domain name in May 1995 from the original registrant, Gary Kremen, who had registered it in May 1994.
Cohen obtained the domain by means of a forged letter to domain registrar Network Solutions, faxed from Kremen"s company "Online Classified", fraudulently stating that Kremen had been dismissed and the firm was abandoning the domain and that Cohen could have lieutenant Network Solutions blindly accepted the fax with no verification and transferred the domain to Cohen, an action that would prove grounds for a later civil suit by Kremen against Network Solutions.
lieutenant is estimated that Cohen earned United States$100 million between October 1995 and November 2000 from his ownership of sex.com.
In April 2001, the court ordered damages of $65 million be paid to Kremen. Cohen then fled to Tijuana, Mexico where he was arrested on October 28, 2005. On that same day, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of California filed federal civil contempt charges in San Diego, California against Cohen for violation of a court order under 18 United States.C. 401.
As of 2005 the amount of damages owed to Kremen had increased to $82 million with interest.
Cohen was released from custody on December 5, 2006, by Judge Ware because Kremen"s lawyers had been unable to uncover Cohen"s offshore bank accounts. Since then, Cohen has not paid the $67 million judgement, and pleads poverty.
Courts have ruled in Kremen"s favor several times since 2006, with evidence that seven individuals, including some of Cohen"s family members, and twelve companies were used to help him hide the money. Cohen was involved in.