Just weeks after being convicted under a California revenge porn criminal law, revenge porn mogul Kevin Bollaert has been ordered to pay $450,000 in a default judgment. Bollaert was involved in a lawsuit brought by a 14-year-old girl, and he largely faced civil counts of child pornography.

Bollaert’s colleague, Eric Chanson, also ran the ugotposted.com revenge porn website. Chanson was commanded to pay the same amount in a judicial order handed down late last month by a federal judge in San Diego, California.

The case against Bollaert was filed on the girl’s behalf by Marc Randazza, a well-known First Amendment lawyer based in Nevada. Randazza previously won a similar default judgment issued by a federal district court judge in Ohio. In that case, a judge ordered Bollaert and Chanson to pay a woman $385,000 for posting sexually explicit images of her on their website. Chanson also partially paid a $330,473.75 default judgment rendered against him in Nevada, which was enough to satisfy his debt, according to a 2014 court document filed by Randazza.

In February 2015, Bollaert was found guilty of identity theft and extortion. The now-offline site, ugotposted.com, worked on an all-too-familiar model: readers could submit nude photos of ex-lovers (almost entirely women), and these submissions often included other personal information like links to victims' Facebook pages.

Bollaert also ran a sister website (changemyreputation.com) where he charged $350 to have this information removed. The 28-year-old reportedly made tens of thousands of dollars from this scheme.