Wallace pleaded guilty to one count of fraud and related activity in connection with electronic mail and one count of criminal contempt in August 2015. According to Ars Technica, prosecutors asked the court for a 36-month sentence. "The defendant's history demonstrates that he has yet to suffer a consequence -- other than a default judgment that cannot be collected -- for his spamming activities," they wrote. "A sentence of 36 months' imprisonment will impress upon the defendant the seriousness of his actions and deter him from engaging in similar conduct again."

By "default judgment," they meant the $1 billion worth of fines he was hit with back in 2009, which they couldn't collect. This time, the court ordered him to pay $310,629 in restitution. And by "history," they meant Wallace's decades-long love affair with spam. He started by inundating people with junk faxes way back in 1991. Since then, he's faced numerous lawsuits filed by Facebook and other entities, including MySpace and AOL.

Disclosure: As you know, AOL is Engadget's parent company.

*Update: Wallace sent out 27 million messages, not 27 billion like what our article said earlier. He's just a spam king, not a spam god.