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America Versus the UFO Hacker

Rob writes "Gary McKinnon, still suffering from Asperger's syndrome, depression, anxiety, and panic attacks, has one last chance to avoid extradition from the UK to the US to face charges of hacking into NASA and Pentagon computers in search of information on UFOs. Will the new UK government keep its word and help him avoid a savage punishment? The New Statesman has a survey of the history and McKinnon's prospects."

6 of 452 comments (clear)

  1. Little sympathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm afraid that I have little sympathy for this guy. I do not think that breaking into computer systems is harmless play. If he'd actually gone to trial back when he was indicted, instead of fighting it for all these years, he's have gotten a minor sentence, very likely no prison time at all, and almost certainly would be out now.
    I have no reason to believe these flamboyant claims that he's likely to be put away for a prison term of "seventy years;" this is bizarre hyperbole that has nothing to do with the way sentencing is actually done in the US.

  2. Where do you get "savage punishment"??? by georgewilliamherbert · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If he's convicted he gets to go to minimum security federal jail for probably 2-4 years. How is that savage punishment?

    Aspergers is neither a cause of computer hacking nor an excuse for it. "Oh, a trial or jail will traumatize him" isn't a valid reason to not put someone on trial either in the US or in England.

    This guy was misguided rather than intentionally malicious, but he misguided himself into a bunch of federal felonies. Aspergers doesn't change your ability to understand legal vs illegal acts.

  3. Re:Aliens! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd go with the "embarrassment/reprisal" hypothesis, myself.

    The DoD's networks are supposed to be all secure and advanced and stuff. Getting hacked by a single sad-case foreign national, acting without support, makes them look pathetic.

    When made to look pathetic, those with power generally seek reprisal against their enemies.

    Frankly, the DoD was lucky to have been hacked by him. He is largely harmless, and watching how he got in was probably instructive, to some degree. They really ought to spend less time hounding him, and more time thinking about the fact that certain other hackers are much less harmless, and substantially less likely to be turned over for a stay in PMITA prison by their host governments...

  4. Re:This is why he has to be tried over here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This maybe true BUT the people who left these networks in such a terrible state should be tried for more serious crimes.

    The US Govt should have given him a medal for exposing such terrible security on their systems. I'll bet they paid lots of taxpayer $$$ to $400 an hour so called Security consultants to setup systems like this?
    These are the guys who should be in the dock.

    In reality, I don't want him anywhere near a plane bound for the US UNTIL the US Govt ratified the extradition treaty with the UK. This would allow people to be extradited from the US to the UK on the same terms as he is being extradited the other way.
    Oh silly me, it is probably unconstitutional. No evidence is needed to be presented to a Judge in the UK. The US Gov't just have tp promise that they have the evidence.
    This clearly breaks 'dur process' laws in the US.
    So until this mess is sorted out he should stay put!

    Just my 2p worth on the matter.

  5. Re:Most hilarious summary ever by Purity+Of+Essence · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree. Having the highest incarceration rate in the world is an example that all free nations should aspire to. USA #1!

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  6. Re:Aliens! by AGMW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The fact is he hacked into government servers he had no business accessing. We can argue motives and harm done all we want but it doesn't change the fact a crime was committed.

    ... and as I understand it, he's admitted to it. What he doesn't deserve is some show trial and 70+ years in a US jail for it because he's apparently a threat to the US's security. Did I read somewhere that one of the passwords he managed to crack was ... "password"? There ya go ... now I've told the world what one of the US Security Services favourite passwords is so I guess I can look forward to an extraordinary rendition trip somewhere scenic for a water-boarding holiday!

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