6 March 2012
http://www.fbi.gov/newyork/press-releases/2012/six-hackers-in-the-united-states-and-abroad-charged-for-
crimes-affecting-over-one-million-victims
Six Hackers in the United States and Abroad Charged for Crimes Affecting
Over One Million Victims
Four Principal Members of Anonymous and LulzSec Charged
with Computer Hacking and Fifth Member Pleads Guilty; AntiSec
Member also Charged with Stealing Confidential Information from Approximately
860,000 Clients and Subscribers of Stratfor
U.S. Attorneys Office
March 06, 2012
Southern District of New York (212) 637-2600
Five computer hackers in the United States and abroad were charged today,
and a sixth pled guilty, for computer hacking and other crimes. The six hackers
identified themselves as aligned with the group Anonymous, which is a loose
confederation of computer hackers and others, and/or offshoot groups related
to Anonymous, including Internet Feds, LulzSec, and
AntiSec.
RYAN ACKROYD, a/k/a kayla, a/k/a lol, a/k/a
lolspoon; JAKE DAVIS, a/k/a topiary, a/k/a
atopiary; DARREN MARTYN, a/k/a pwnsauce, a/k/a
raepsauce, a/k/a networkkitten; and DONNCHA
OCEARRBHAIL, a/k/a palladium, who identified themselves
as members of Anonymous, Internet Feds, and/or LulzSec, were charged in an
indictment unsealed today in Manhattan federal court with computer hacking
conspiracy involving the hacks of Fox Broadcasting Company, Sony Pictures
Entertainment, and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
OCEARRBHAIL is also charged in a separate criminal complaint with
intentionally disclosing an unlawfully intercepted wire communication.
HECTOR XAVIER MONSEGUR, a/k/a Sabu, a/k/a Xavier DeLeon,
a/k/a Leon, who also identified himself as a member of Anonymous,
Internet Feds, and LulzSec, pled guilty on August 15, 2011 in U.S. District
Court to a 12-count information charging him with computer hacking conspiracies
and other crimes. MONSEGURS information and guilty plea were unsealed
today. The crimes to which MONSEGUR pled guilty include computer hacking
conspiracy charges initially filed in the Southern District of New York.
He also pled guilty to the following charges: a substantive hacking charge
initially filed by the U.S. Attorneys Office in the Eastern District
of California related to the hacks of HBGary, Inc. and HBGary Federal LLC;
a substantive hacking charge initially filed by the U.S. Attorneys
Office in the Central District of California related to the hack of Sony
Pictures Entertainment and Fox Broadcasting Company; a substantive hacking
charge initially filed by the U.S. Attorneys Office in the Northern
District of Georgia related to the hack of Infragard Members Alliance; and
a substantive hacking charge initially filed by the U.S. Attorneys
Office in the Eastern District of Virginia related to the hack of PBS, all
of which were transferred to the Southern District of New York, pursuant
to Rule 20 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, in coordination with
the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS)
in the Justice Departments Criminal Division.
Late yesterday, JEREMY HAMMOND, a/k/a Anarchaos, a/k/a
sup_g, a/k/a burn, a/k/a yohoho, a/k/a
POW, a/k/a tylerknowsthis, a/k/a
crediblethreat, who identified himself as a member of AntiSec,
was arrested in Chicago, Illinois and charged in a criminal complaint with
crimes relating to the December 2011 hack of Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
(Stratfor), a global intelligence firm in Austin, Texas, which
may have affected approximately 860,000 victims. In publicizing the Stratfor
hack, members of AntiSec reaffirmed their connection to Anonymous and other
related groups, including LulzSec. For example, AntiSec members published
a document with links to the stolen Stratfor data titled, Anonymous
Lulzxmas rooting you proud on a file sharing website.
The following allegations are based on the indictment, the information, the
complaints, and statements made at MONSEGURs guilty plea:
Hacks by Anonymous, Internet Feds, and LulzSec
Since at least 2008, Anonymous has been a loose confederation of computer
hackers and others. MONSEGUR and other members of Anonymous took responsibility
for a number of cyber attacks between December 2010 and June 2011, including
denial of service (DoS) attacks against the websites of Visa,
MasterCard, and PayPal, as retaliation for the refusal of these companies
to process donations to Wikileaks, as well as hacks or DoS attacks on foreign
government computer systems.
Between December 2010 and May 2011, members of Internet Feds similarly waged
a deliberate campaign of online destruction, intimidation, and criminality.
Members of Internet Feds engaged in a series of cyber attacks that included
breaking into computer systems, stealing confidential information, publicly
disclosing stolen confidential information, hijacking victims e-mail
and Twitter accounts, and defacing victims Internet websites. Specifically,
ACKROYD, DAVIS, MARTYN, OCEARRBHAIL, and MONSEGUR, as members of
InternetFeds, conspired to commit computer hacks including: the hack of the
website of Fine Gael, a political party in Ireland; the hack of computer
systems used by security firms HBGary, Inc. and its affiliate HBGary Federal,
LLC, from which Internet Feds stole confidential data pertaining to 80,000
user accounts; and the hack of computer systems used by Fox Broadcasting
Company, from which Internet Feds stole confidential data relating to more
than 70,000 potential contestants on X-Factor, a Fox television
show.
In May 2011, following the publicity that they had generated as a result
of their hacks, including those of Fine Gael and HBGary, ACKROYD, DAVIS,
MARTYN, and MONSEGUR formed and became the principal members of a new hacking
group called Lulz Security or LulzSec. Like Internet
Feds, LulzSec undertook a campaign of malicious cyber assaults on the websites
and computer systems of various business and governmental entities in the
United States and throughout the world. Specifically, ACKROYD, DAVIS, MARTYN,
and MONSEGUR, as members of LulzSec, conspired to commit computer hacks including
the hacks of computer systems used by the PBS, in retaliation for what LulzSec
perceived to be unfavorable news coverage in an episode of the news program
Frontline; Sony Pictures Entertainment, in which LulzSec stole
confidential data concerning approximately 100,000 users of Sonys website;
and Bethesda Softworks, a video game company based in Maryland, in which
LulzSec stole confidential information for approximately 200,000 users of
Bethesdas website.
The Stratfor Hack
In December 2011, HAMMOND conspired to hack into computer systems used by
Stratfor, a private firm that provides governments and others with independent
geopolitical analysis. HAMMOND and his co-conspirators, as members of AntiSec,
stole confidential information from those computer systems, including Stratfor
employees e-mails as well as account information for approximately
860,000 Stratfor subscribers or clients. HAMMOND and his co-conspirators
stole credit card information for approximately 60,000 credit card users
and used some of the stolen data to make unauthorized charges exceeding $700,000.
HAMMOND and his co-conspirators also publicly disclosed some of the confidential
information they had stolen.
The Hack of International Law Enforcement
In January 2012, OCEARRBHAIL hacked into the personal e-mail account
of an officer with Irelands national police service, the An Garda Siochana
(the Garda). Because the Garda officer had forwarded work e-mails
to a personal account, OCEARRBHAIL learned information about how to
access a conference call that the Garda, the FBI, and other law enforcement
agencies were planning to hold on January 17, 2012 regarding international
investigations of Anonymous and other hacking groups. OCEARRBHAIL then
accessed and secretly recorded the January 17 international law enforcement
conference call, and then disseminated the illegally-obtained recording to
others.
***
MONSEGUR, 28, of New York, New York, pled guilty to three counts of computer
hacking conspiracy, five counts of computer hacking, one count of computer
hacking in furtherance of fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit access
device fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, and one count
of aggravated identity theft. He faces a maximum sentence of 124 years and
six months in prison.
ACKROYD, 23, of Doncaster, United Kingdom; DAVIS, 29, of Lerwick, Shetland
Islands, United Kingdom; and MARTYN, 25, of Galway, Ireland, each are charged
with two counts of computer hacking conspiracy. Each conspiracy count carries
a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.
OCEARRBHAIL, 19, of Birr, Ireland, is charged in the indictment with
one count of computer hacking conspiracy, for which he faces 10 years in
prison. He is also charged in the complaint with one count of intentionally
disclosing an unlawfully intercepted wire communication, for which he faces
a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
HAMMOND, 27, of Chicago, Illinois, is charged with one count of computer
hacking conspiracy, one count of computer hacking, and one count of conspiracy
to commit access device fraud. Each count carries a maximum sentence of 10
years in prison.
DAVIS is separately facing criminal charges in the United Kingdom, which
remain pending, and ACKROYD is being interviewed today by the Police Central
e-crime Unit in the United Kingdom. OCEARRBHAIL was arrested today
by the Garda.
The case is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Southern
District of New York. The investigation was initiated and led by the FBI,
and its New York Cyber Crime Task Force, which is a federal, state, and local
law enforcement task force combating cybercrime, with assistance from the
PCeU; a unit of New Scotland Yards Specialist Crime Directorate, SCD6;
the Garda; the Criminal Divisions CCIPS; and the U.S. Attorneys
Offices for the Eastern District of California, the Central District of
California, the Northern District of Georgia, and the Eastern District of
Virginia; as well as the Criminal Divisions Office of International
Affairs.
The charges contained in the indictment and complaints are merely accusations,
and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
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