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Lords throw McKinnon to the dogs

Anus Horibilius awaits in Yank chokey
Wednesday, 30 July 2008, 16:27

PENTAGON HACKER Gary McKinnon could have the book thrown at him by US prosecutors after the UK's highest court today quashed his appeal against an extradition order.

Had he pleaded guilty when the US offered him a plea bargain six years ago, he would have been back in England by now, and walking the streets as a free man. But the terms of the bargain were always that if he denied the charges levelled by US prosecutors, they would come down hard on him. And now he must live in fear of the severest consequences.

Gary's solicitors, Kaim Todner, said in a statement handed out at the Lords today: "American officials involved in this case have stated that they want to see him 'fry'.". This is the basis on which Gary will now make a last-ditch attempt at freedom by throwing himself at the mercy of the European Court of Human Rights. The Lords said they would have given Gary his appeal if the US had made extreme threats of punishment in their plea bargaining. But they had no problem with the prosecutors' terms.

There was no mention of a threat that Gary would "fry" for his crimes in either the judgement presented by Lord Brown of Eaton-Under-Heywood today, nor in their hearing of the case last month. So there is at least a thread of hope for Gary to take to Brussels.

What the Lord's did consider was how Gary would probably have served only six to 12 months in a US jail and then no more than three years in the clink back home, had he but pleaded guilty. So why didn't he?

There is the small matter of his not agreeing with all the charges laid against him. Then Gary was also scared witless of even serving a short term in a US jail. "I'm sitting up all night thinking about jail and about being arse-f***ed," Gary told The Guardian newspaper in 2005. "I'm having all these visions of, 'What you doing attacking our country, boy? Pick up that soap'," he said, describing how his legs would shake like jelly when he walked down the road.

The Lord's also considered what they called a threat of "homosexual rape" made by US prosecutors. In a test case they cited in the judgement (USA v Cobb [2001]), the US prosecutor had used such a threat to intimidate his Canadian quarry. "You are going to be the boyfriend of a very bad man if you wait out your extradition," the prosecutor had warned on television.

"That was understood by the court to mean that they would be subject to homosexual rape," said the Lords today. It was an intimidation, a violation of rights and an abuse of the legal process, the Canadian court said when it threw out the US extradition request. But again, there was no record of any such threat in Gary's case - only Gary's fear of being done up the Gary Glitter by some redneck muscle-boy.

Leaving the threat that he would "fry" aside, he only faced the possibility of "8-10 years, possibly longer" in jail; and that with no chance of repatriation he would see out some 95 per cent of the sentence in, most probably, a "high-security" rural prison.

In 2002, Gary was facing the prospect of 70 years and a $1.75m fine. On the day he was indicted by the US District Court of Eastern Virginia, the US Department of Justice said in a statement: "McKinnon faces on each count a maximum sentence of 10 years of imprisonment and a $250,000 fine."

The US subsequently said that if Gary did not plead guilty they would bill him $400,000 to $1million for the cost in man hours to "conduct a damage assessment" and "restore the compromised computer systems" he had hacked (We have to wonder how much of this bill could be attributed to the time US techies spent plugging the holes Gary had exposed. Perhaps the hacker should be charging them for services rendered?).

An uncooperative Gary would also be billed for the organisational cost of computer systems being inaccessible while the damage assessments were being done. He allegedly hacked 97 of them in all, housed across numerous sites owned by NASA and various US armed forces.

Then there would be a charge for his alleged disruption to the Washington District defense computer network and the US Navy's Earle Weapons Station. And they wanted to bump the sentence up further for "endangering national security" and "substantial non-monetary harm", which might refer to the embarrassment the world's most powerful military suffered from having its computers hacked by a stoner with a handful of ten-penny software tools.

None of this constituted a threat extreme enough to be an abuse of justice, agreed Lord Scott of Foscote, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, Baroness Hale of Richmond and Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury. The UK had no problem with such plea bargaining, they said.

Repatriation wasn't a right that Gary could claim under the Convention of Human Rights, as he had attempted. UK extradition law accommodated differences in foreign legal systems, they said. Gary's exploits would have been punished under UK law with a maximum sentence of life imprisonment anyway, they added.

And so the hapless hacker appears to have consigned much of his life to legal limbo and nightmares of shower-room violations. Over six years since he was caught blowing raspberries at the US military, he could wait years yet before he gets a judgement from Europe. Then if he is hoisted before a Virginian judge, the court will have to plough through 1 terrabyte of electronic evidence gathered by prosecutors.

Then what are his chances of getting off? It could be a while yet before we see a free Gary. µ

See Also
Pentagon hacker in the hands of the Lord(s)
" NASA hacker" appeals to the House of Lords
" Super-hacker" McKinnon fails not to get extradited
Home Secretary extradites UFO hacker
McKinnon can be extradited to face the wrath of the US
Super-hacker McKinnon speaks out
Alleged Brit hacker awaits extradition verdict
" World's biggest hacker" is a Londoner
British "hacker" will fight extradition to US

L'Inq
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Comments
McKinnon

The problems that computer users have with spam e-mails and computer hackers, then I don't have a problem if this person spends the rest of his life behind bars in the USA.
In the UK we should treat these people as the criminals they are and put them away for a very long time.

posted by : H Rayner, 30 July 2008 Complain about this comment
voting american citizen

mine is a question. why was our military left in a vunerable position,could not it have came from someonne in a country that hates us?

posted by : jake stevens jr., 30 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Gary never free

Face it, he will NEVER see the light of day as a "free" man. Nor should he. How DARE he pillage and plunder around someone else's computer? He is getting what all "hackers" deserve, a due sentence for his not-so-harmless crimes.

And as far as his treatment in a U.S. prison, he should have thought of the possible consequences BEFORE he started his criminal rampage. And don't pretend those kinds of activities don't happen in British gaols.

You do the crime, you serve the time.

posted by : Rich Wargo, 30 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Sympathy

By making an example of Gary, the US government risks making a hero & martyr to aspirational techies everywhere.

posted by : Benji, 30 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Jail?

Instead of sending this man to jail, you'd think someone would give him a job, the best defence against a hacker, is a hacker...

posted by : Andy Capp, 31 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Life for "virtual trespassing" ?

I think this is totally out of whack. All he did was the virtual equivalent to walking onto an open military base and snoop around - that's not even breaking and entering, simply trespassing. How many trespassers get life? 

They should think themselves lucky it was a bored geek from an allied country and not a terrorist. This man needs paying!

The US and other governments are coming down way too hard on hackers, all because their pride got hurt and they're being made to look like the incompetent morons they are...

posted by : Rich, 31 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Additional sources

Read:
http://www.itsecurity.com/features/top-10-famous-hackers-042407/ 
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/hackers/interviews/anon.html

posted by : Ender, 31 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Tresspassing?

Simply tresspassing and snooping around?
He might not get life, but it truly is serious when he knows where he is 'snooping around'; it's more than wandering around your next door neighbours backyard while he's gone, he's actually actually browsing around a country's defence network... it doesn't matter if it's his own country's or any one elses.
Let an average citizen of any country enter their own county's military bases, it's not allowed, that's why there's a guard at the gate. Now we're talking about a foreign national trying it.

If he does time, then dependent on his behaviour, he'll be released. The American's or British military may try to hire him. You can bet that he'll be monitored in case 'someone else' attempts to recruit his services

posted by : R Barczewska, 31 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Lord Blow Drinks Hayward 5000.

theres Got to be Something Wrong with Titled Fellow whose involved in HomoSexual Rape. You Know Meep Loute, I'm Bit Old for Blojoi.

As Far AS demand to Get Fried, It isn't term to renegoiate, Simply defendant has Right to ONE Fry & NO More.

Smartie Pants should have hacked Some Hon Critters computer. Or Better Yet, Blo.wn It up. Hahahahhh.
drashek

posted by : Puke, 31 July 2008 Complain about this comment
Shouldn't the dimwits in charge of the computer security in USA be facing charges of incompetence?

If he can hack their system then so can any country/group in the world that wants to. Instead of turning the guns on the hacker, who inly exploited poor security, they should turn them on the people in charge of the systems.

How was he able to do this? Could it have been prevented? Was this due to laziness and incompetence on behald of the security services or their software and hardware suppliers?

What if he were a Russian/Chinese/Terrorist hacker, what would they do then?

posted by : interested_party, 01 August 2008 Complain about this comment
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