Posted on 05/10/2006 6:08:58 PM PDT by LibWhacker
Gary McKinnon leaves Bow Street
Magistrates' Court yesterday
after a judge recommended that
he be extradited to the US
(DAVID BEBBER)
A BRITISH man accused of the biggest military hacking operation yet faces trial in the US after a judge recommended him for extradition yesterday.
Gary McKinnon believes that he could be sent to Guantanamo Bay and tried by a military tribunal if his extradition goes ahead. He said that he was practically already hung and quartered if US government claims that he would face a federal court in Virginia proved correct.
Mr McKinnon, 40, is alleged to have caused $700,000 (£375,000) of damage in 2001-02 by hacking into US military computers, including army, navy, Pentagon and Nasa systems, using software available on the internet.
At Bow Street Magistrates Court in London yesterday, District Judge Nicholas Evans said that Mr McKinnon, of Wood Green, North London, should be recommended for extradition. The case is expected to be passed to John Reid, the Home Secretary, for a final decision.
The US Government said it had given assurances that it would not make Mr McKinnon subject to Military Order No 1, which allows President Bush to detain suspects indefinitely. But outside court, Mr McKinnon said that he remained fearful.
As one person has said to me, most people in Guantanamo have not been proved to be terrorists but allegedly I directly attacked the military. And Virginia is famously conservative. Im practically already hung and quartered over there, he said.
Speaking after being released on conditional bail, he said that he had expected yesterdays ruling and was now preparing to appeal. In a direct appeal to Mr Reid, he added: Do right by your subjects.
Mr McKinnon is alleged to have stolen 950 passwords and deleted system files from computers at the Earle US Naval Weapons Station in New Jersey, shutting down the entire base for a week immediately after September 11.
Although he said yesterday that he regretted his actions, he denied that he had ever intended to disrupt security. The fact that I logged on there and there were no passwords means that there was no security.
I was amazed at the lack of security and the reason I left not just one note but multiple notes on multiple desktops was to say, Look, this is ridiculous. When asked why he had hacked into US defence systems, Mr McKinnon, whose hacking name was Solo, said that he had been looking for evidence of UFOs.
In a lengthy judgment delivered a month after Aprils extradition hearing, Judge Evans said that the risk of Mr McKinnon being sent to Guantanamo was fanciful given the assurances made on behalf of the American Government.
I have no difficulty in concluding that anyone facing extradition to the United States who faced a real risk of being charged under Military Order No 1 should not be extradited. For over 150 years we have had extradition arrangements with the United States. Many hundreds of extraditions have taken place over the years in both directions . . . It is inconceivable, given the unequivocal assurances, and all that history and extradition experience, that the Government would risk damaging, perhaps irretrievably damaging, our extradition arrangements by not honouring the assurances.
The judge rejected claims under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights that Mr McKinnons right to private and family life should prevent his extradition. He told the court: I readily accept, if convicted in the United States, the probable sentence is likely to be appreciably harsher than, in comparable circumstances, it would be in the United Kingdom. It must be obvious to any defendant that if you choose to commit a crime in a foreign country, you run the risk of being prosecuted in that country.
Mr McKinnon faces seven charges of computer fraud and related activity in Virginia, according to the US Department of Justice website. Each charge carries a maximum sentence of ten years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine.
All for it...
Just shoot him.
Hung and quartered. Maybe he shoud fear drawn and quartered.
I'd say he needs to put his tinfoil hat on, but seeing that he was looking for UFO's he probably already has it on.
should fear sorry
Word to the unwise...don't hold your Koran without gloves on or your roomie, Mohammed, will kill you.
GITMO I seriously doubt it unless he has transfered data to terrorist groups. I don't see that one listed. If convicted a Federal Pen. Yea he'll likely be in a Federal Pen Medium Security and no access to computers etc for most of the remainder of his life. Not exactly the fame he was likely looking for.
I say we stab him, then we tattoo him, then we hang him, and then we kill him.
but allegedly I directly attacked the military.
Mr McKinnon is alleged to have stolen 950 passwords and deleted system files from computers at the Earle US Naval Weapons Station in New Jersey, shutting down the entire base for a week immediately after September 11.
If you did in fact do this, then you most certainly DID directly attack the military, you twit.
Now there is a Lib that needs to be wacked.
I would say his chances of going to Gitmo are pretty slim, He has a better chance of being hired by Macafee or one of the other anti-virus softwear vendors.
If sentences handed out to other hackers are any indication of what happens to hackers he would come out smelling like a rose.
Guys like this, like leftists, are nothing more than children. Do whatever the hell they want, then complain that they will actually have to face the consequences when they get caught. Lock him and throw away the key. We are in the middle of a war, he's lucky that he hasn't been shot.
LOL :-)
LOL
Well if it was going to be done which it likely would have been, I'm glad he was the one that did it. I'm not condoning it by any means. We were lucky this was some moron looking for 15 minutes of fame and not someone looking to do far worse damage than was done. That being said Lock him away.
I'm hoping someone Jack Ruby's him.
He won't be sent to Guantanamo. That would be too good.
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