A Scot who was part of a group of young British computer hackers who
masterminded sophisticated cyber attacks on major global institutions
from their bedrooms has been jailed for two years.
Jake Davis, 20, from Lerwick, Shetland along with Ryan Ackroyd,
Mustafa Al-Bassam and Ryan Cleary considered themselves to be
"latter-day pirates" when they masterminded sophisticated cyber attacks
on major global institutions including the CIA, Sony, the FBI and
Nintendo.
They were "hactivists" with the LulzSec collective behind attacks that
stole sensitive personal data including emails, online passwords and
credit card details belonging to millions of people.
News International, the NHS and the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency
(Soca) were also victims of the group, who lived as far apart as London
and the Shetland Islands and never met in person.
Sentencing them at Southwark Crown Court in London today, Judge Deborah
Taylor said some of their taunting of their victims "makes chilling
reading".
What they considered a cyber game, she said, had in fact had real consequences.
"You cared nothing for the privacy of others but did everything you
could through your computer activities to hide your own identities while
seeking publicity," she said.
Stolen information was posted unencrypted on their website and
file-sharing sites like Pirate Bay in 2011, the court had previously
heard.
They also carried out distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks,
using linked networks of up to one million computers to overpower and
crash websites.
Their activity collectively cost their targets millions of dollars and
potentially left millions of people at risk from criminals.
All had admitted offences under the Computer Misuse Act 1990.
Davis, who used the alias Topiary and was Lulzsec's main publicist, was ordered to serve 24 months in a young offenders unit.
Cleary, 21, of Wickford Essex, known as ViraL, pleaded guilty to six
charges including hacking into US air force agency computers at the
Pentagon.
He was jailed for a total of two years and eight months.
Ex-soldier Ackroyd, 26, from Mexborough, South Yorkshire, was jailed
for 30 months having previously pleaded guilty to one charge of carrying
out an unauthorised act to impair the operation of a computer.
The Iraq veteran used the online persona of a 16-year-old girl called Kayla.
Al-Bassam, 18, from Peckham, south London, used the alias tFlow. He was
at school at the time and is currently sitting his A-levels, the court
heard.
He was given a sentence of 20 months suspended for two years, plus 300 hours of community work.
Davis and Al-Bassam had previously pleaded guilty to hacking and
launching cyber attacks on a range of organisations, including the CIA
and SOCA.
Detective Superintendent Charlie McMurdie, head of the Police Central
E-Crime Unit, said the group were "the worst sort of vandals".
Speaking outside court she said they were told about the group by the FBI.
When they raided Cleary's home he was in the middle of attacking a website, she said.
She said LulzSec had been "running riot causing significant harm to businesses and people".
"Theirs was an unusual campaign in that it was more about promoting
their own criminal behaviour than any form of criminal financial
profit," she said.
"In essence they were the the worst sort of vandal, acting without care
of cost or harm to those they affected, whether this was to cause a
company to fold and so costing people their jobs, or to put at threat
the thousands of innocent Internet users whose logins and passwords they
made public.
"In the case of the (Arizona) police force whose employee details they
revealed, the group's reckless publication of confidential material
could very well have threatened lives.
"They claims to be doing it for a laugh, but real people were affected by their actions."
One director of a company targeted by LulzSec had to move his family
after details leaked online lead to death threats against him, the court
heard.
Al-Bassam left court without speaking to journalists.
Andrew Hadik, the Crown Prosecution Service London reviewing lawyer,
said the group's actions had been "cowardly and vindictive".
"Co-ordinating and carrying out these attacks from the safety of their
own bedrooms may have made the group feel detached from the consequences
of their actions," he said.
"But to say it was all a bit of fun in no way reflects the reality of their actions.
"They were in fact committing serious criminal offences for which they have been successfully prosecuted.
"This case should serve as a warning to other cyber-criminals that they are not invincible."
After he was arrested, Cleary told police: "Sure, it's a crime, obviously.
"But it is not as if it is that f****** serious."
His solicitor Karen Todner issued a statement today in which she said he accepted his guilt and regretted his actions.
"Mr Cleary has Asperger's but does not seek to excuse his behaviour," she said.
"We believe the pleas that we entered do cover all aspects of Mr
Cleary's criminality and therefore we do not anticipate that he will be
in receipt of an application for extradition from the United States of
America."
The court had heard that there are grand jury indictments being
prepared in the case and that some members of the group may face
extradition requests in the future.
Cleary also admitted three charges of possession of indecent images
relating to 172 child pornography pictures found on his hard drive. He
will be sentenced for those at a later date.
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