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NASA Hacker Wins Right to Extradition Hearing

E5Rebel writes "Gary McKinnon, the UK-based ex-systems administrator accused of conducting the biggest military hack of all time, has won the right to have his case against extradition to the U.S. heard by the House of Lords."

22 of 217 comments (clear)

  1. Big hair b-rock bands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm not even sure if the House of Lords will even be interested in hearing the case.

  2. Plea bargain by l33t.g33k · · Score: 5, Informative
    From TFA:

    They accused US investigators of trying to coerce McKinnon into accepting a secret plea bargain by threatening him with a long prison sentence if he did not collaborate.
    Hmmm... that's a strange thing to criticize... this is a pretty standard practice in US criminal law - cooperate, forfeit your right to a trial, and you get off easy.
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    1. Re:Plea bargain by _KiTA_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hmmm... that's a strange thing to criticize... this is a pretty standard practice in US criminal law - cooperate, forfeit your right to a trial, and you get off easy.

      Except, is that legal in the UK?

      I mean, yea, yeah, he's being tried in the US. But don't his rights as a UK citizen apply as well?

    2. Re:Plea bargain by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Informative
      I once had a police offer tell me that, in the UK and Australia, such things are illegal. This is actually just holding the police to the same standard as the rest of society. In the US there's laws against "making deals" but they don't apply to the police (or the government's prosecutors). For example:

      519.030 Compounding a crime.
      (1) A person is guilty of compounding a crime when:
      (a) He solicits, accepts or agrees to accept any benefit upon an agreement or
      understanding that he will refrain from initiating a prosecution for a crime; or
      (b) He confers, offers, or agrees to confer any benefit upon another person upon
      agreement or understanding that such other person will refrain from initiating
      a prosecution for a crime.
      (2) In any prosecution under this section, it is a defense that the benefit did not exceed
      an amount which the defendant reasonably believed to be due as restitution or
      indemnification for harm caused by the offense.
      (3) Compounding a crime is a Class A misdemeanor. So yeah, if I shoot you and say "I'll give you $10k to keep quiet" then I'm compounding a crime. If you accept then we're both compounding a crime.

      Most the time the deals made in the US are of the "plead guilty" variety, not the "talk and we won't prosecute" variety, so this particular law wouldn't apply, but you get the idea.
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    3. Re:Plea bargain by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Compounding a crime has nothing to do with plea bargaining. In almost all cases, the defendant could be considered to have committed several different crimes, with different penalties. A plea bargain is just a negotiation between the two sides as to which crime the defendant will plead guilty to and how great a penalty will be imposed.

      Immunity from prosecution in return for testimony comes closer, of course, but in that case, the benefit is to the public, not to the prosecutor personally.

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    4. Re:Plea bargain by the_womble · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hmmm... that's a strange thing to criticize... this is a pretty standard practice in US criminal law - cooperate, forfeit your right to a trial, and you get off easy.

      Except that the rest of the world regards it as a loathsome practice designed to get someone in jail for something, even when there is a lack of conclusive evidence against them. It is getting criminal convictions through coercion rather than evidence.
    5. Re:Plea bargain by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I belive you have misread the GP, I think you missed the "what's good for the goose is good for the gander" parabole[sic?]. From an Aussie/UK point of view US prosecuters seem more interested in plea bargains than they say, a sound case against the person who is on trial. I understand deals are made to save money and court time in all three countries but that should not be the first concern of the DPP. Once "justice" has been seen to be done then the DPP can start haggling about the price tag.

      It should be difficult to put a citizen in jail and impossible to seek state sponsored revenge through executions, but to an outsider (like me) it sometimes appears to be a dutch auction where they start at "life or death" and work down until the guy in the orange suit cracks. Not trying to be offensive here but do prosecuters in the US get a "job rating" based on some measure of "success"?

      --
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  3. Re:aliens are for real by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Funny

    Your comment just reminded me of a comic strip.

    Secretary (undercover alien working for the CIA): Would either of you care for more coffee?
    Agent Wolf: You didn't fertilize it with alien mind control spores, did you?
    Secretary: For the last time, agent Wolf, I AM NOT AN ALIEN.
    Agent Wolf: YOU HAVE A TAIL!!!
    Their boss: Agent Wolf, that's enough! Or do you want to be sent to sensitivity training again?
    Agent Wolf: No, sir.

  4. question.... by lordvalrole · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How do they figure £475,000 worth of damage? I don't know much about the case (or really anything of it) but did he actually do harmful damage to the crap he hacked into...or is it potential damage? I can never trust half the money numbers people throw around these days.

    1. Re:question.... by ScentCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But - if those systems were your responsibility - what would it take you to satisfy the people you report to that there was no damage? How many hours of review, extra archiving, and other admin chores would you face in the wake of known break in? Do you just take the cracker's word for it that he didn't alter anything, or do you have to spend lots of time checking that out, and probably get some third parties involved in auditing that look-see, just to be sure? None of that is free, and most of it's very expensive.

      --
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    2. Re:question.... by Sobrique · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Ahh, but if you're J Random Sysadmin, then you'll find it _far_ easier to blame the hacker, than it would be to get someone to listen to your professional opinion that you security 'needs work'.

      And less prone to actually losing your budget. I have direct experience of a previous employer, where we were requesting a network kit upgrade for 5 years, and each year, it got dropped from the budget, because 'well, it seems OK'. We spent that long rebooting switches, and almost daily 'firefighting' to keep the rising tide away from our sandcastle.

      And then one day, it all fell over, in a critical fashion. The usual recriminations vanished very quickly when we pulled out the 5 years of budget paperwork.

      So, lets just imagine, that the SA there _knows_ security needs work. But as with all such things, it takes time and a serious effort to get a 'proper' secure system setup. I mean, you can't just turn off telnet on a few servers, and hope that's ok :).

      And they get hacked. And it goes public. As said sysadmin, wouldn't you then take the opportuntity to implement that idea you've had for ages, to tighten up security, and make everything a little bit better, only this time you have managers practically forcing you to do what you wanted to do all along. Better yet, you can spend loads of moolah with impuginty, and pull it out of the 'emergency response' budget, and proceed to wave the 'ooh hacker' flag when anyone questions you over it.

  5. Tit for tat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, it needs saying so someone better had. Firstly the guy is an unhinged twunt who got high on too much weed and went looking for "UFO evidence".
    Ergo, he represents absolutely ZERO threat to the security of any group (unless of course you guys actually DO have those UFOs hidden :)

    So basically he's being punished because he embarrased a US institution that should know better about computer security.

    Secondly, we here in the UK are in a bit of pickle and wish this would go away. See, some crazy Russian murdered another Russian spy in London with some nasty radioactive poison. Pretty serious right? But if we want him to stand trial and be extradited from Russia then we'd have to give them an equally unpleasant mafia boss who is hiding in London that Putin wants. Stalemate. Both countries are hiding behind the skirt of "We don't extradite people to countries where they would face danger or unfair trial"

    Problem: The USA is a country that tortures prisoners and disappears people to secret prisons and we know this because the UN has condemned it as a human rights abuser. We have a serious crediblity problem if this guy goes to the USA.

    I see a deal.

    Let's say, we give this dangerous hacker to the USA and they promise he'll get a fair trial In return and we'll take George W Bush for the multiple war crimes he's indited with to the International Crimial Court at the Haugue (and promise he will get a fair trial) and let's call it quits huh?

    1. Re:Tit for tat by Short+Circuit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      * He scanned 65,000 machines in about "8 minutes" by "tying together other people's machines" using a 56k dial up connection
              * During a hacking escapade he chatted to an engineer who "saw" him, via WordPad
              * His connection was so slow he wrote a clever program that "turned the colour down to 4bit colour and the screen resolution really, really low, and even then the picture was still juddering". Juddering ?! What kind of display was he using, a slide projector ?
              * He couldn't save any of the pictures he downloaded but despite the "juddering" low resolution "It was a picture of something
      that definitely wasn't man-made" and what with the slow connection, when he got cut off "I saw the guy's hand move across."
      C'mon, this guy is an utter joke, none of the above is plausible. If any of these claims were anywhere near true then he is a script kiddy at best. Mentally unstable more like. The first item sounds like a botnet. I've (legally) done the second item, over VNC. The third item sounds plausible if he turns the VNC bit depth way, way down. And, yes, the outcome would behave very much like a slide projector on a dial-up connection.

      As for the fourth item, I don't know why he didn't think to take a screenshot of his VNC window; That would have given him something to save. And I don't know what he was referring to by some guy's hand moving.

      All in all, it sounds like he used a botnet to find a PC running unprotected VNC, and connected to it with compression turned way up, and color depth turned way down. At some point, some poor guy noticed his computer acting up on his own, and chatted with the cracker by opening up a text editor and taking turns typing. All of this is very plausible.
    2. Re:Tit for tat by cycoj · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Secondly, we here in the UK are in a bit of pickle and wish this would go away. See, some crazy Russian murdered another Russian spy in London with some nasty radioactive poison. Pretty serious right? But if we want him to stand trial and be extradited from Russia then we'd have to give them an equally unpleasant mafia boss who is hiding in London that Putin wants. Stalemate. Both countries are hiding behind the skirt of "We don't extradite people to countries where they would face danger or unfair trial"
      Actually it is explicitly forbidden by the Russian constitution. I just read up on this, because I thought that almost all states don't extradite their own citizens (Germany has a similar "Artikel" in their constitution). Apparently it is a lot less common in common law countries. So the US, the UK ... do extradite their own citizens. So bottom line the UK are demanding that the Russians break their constitution.
  6. Don't worry. by LaminatorX · · Score: 4, Funny
    Since the rest of the world has nothing but respect for the integrity of our justice system and rule of law, the Lords should honor our extradition request and send him on presently.

    (...and if not, we'll just grab him and stash him someplace, forever.)

  7. The Law Lords by flyingfsck · · Score: 5, Informative

    is not the same thing as the House of Lords. The Law Lords is the highest court in the British Commonwealth.

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    1. Re:The Law Lords by Marty200 · · Score: 5, Funny

      is not the same thing as the House of Lords. The Law Lords is the highest court in the British Commonwealth.

      So where do the time lords fit into that hierarchy?

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    2. Re:The Law Lords by nacturation · · Score: 5, Funny

      So where do the time lords fit into that hierarchy? Go down the hall and it's the fourth dimension on the right.
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  8. Re:aliens are for real by omeomi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know why people starve in Africa? It's cause they have like 30 children.

    I think, generally speaking, when you have a vast impoverished region, it has more to do with horribly corrupt governments, and not so much to do with having "like 30 children". From what I understand, families in highly impoverished areas with high mortality rates do tend to have a lot of children, with the hope that some of them will actually survive, and maybe even prosper, but I would suggest that's more an effect of poverty rather than a cause of it. The reason that average American doesn't have tons of children isn't because we're smarter than the rest of the world, it's because all of our children have a reasonably good chance at survival, and a good chance at a comfortable life. Their chances at success are made better if we only have a few children, so we can afford to pay for their education, but in a region like Darfur, having just 2 children and hoping for the best probably means none of your children will make it to adulthood...

  9. Plea Bargain by BrookHarty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I thought it was because the UK doesn't have a Plea bargain agreement system, it would break UK law.
    So the US basically said accept our plea or end up in prison for life. I think thats where the human rights issue also comes in.

    One of the biggest problems with US law is the plea bargain system, thats why the laws are so horrible, it makes people want to bargain instead of going to court. Its not to punish people, its to keep everyone out of jury trials.

    Hell, if everyone went to a trial for everything, could you imagine the crippling effect it would have on the courts? Everyone citizen would have to pull multiple jury trails to keep up with it.

  10. Poodle by giorgosts · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Britain is America's poodle. This guy, for all intends and purposes, has to be tried in the UK, by the British system. Does the USA extradite American nationals to the UK? Do they extradite them e.g. to Italy, where several CIA agents have been sentenced (in absentia) for conspiracy?

  11. Re:aliens are for real by rbanffy · · Score: 4, Funny

    My God! It's full of trolls!

    Sorry. Couldn't resist