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Chuck
May 11th, 2006, 05:19 PM
A British hacker who broke into U.S. military systems (including those of the Pentagon, Army, Navy, and Air Force, among others) may be extradited to the United States. Gary McKinnon would be "charged with the biggest military computer hack of all time," according to U.S. Attorney Paul McNulty.

Claiming that he will not receive a fair trial in the U.S., and could just as easily be tried in Britain, McKinnon has been fighting extradition. His solicitor, Karen Rodner, says they will appeal the decision to extradite. Although McKinnon's crimes were committed in 2001 and 2002, the government waited (for unclear reasons) until 2005 to begin the extradition process.

McKinnon has expressed concern over the possibility of being jailed in the Guantanamo Bay facilities. The U.S. government has provided documents to his defense team that the admitted hacker will not be tried as a terrorist, or under military law.

McKinnon maintains that he, as a self-professed "bumbling computer nerd," never intended to disrupt security, and some are arguing that his hacking did the U.S. government a favor by highlighting its networks' weaknesses. The government rejects this claim, estimating the damage caused by the hacks at over $1 million, although McKinnon denies taking any harmful actions.

McKinnon went on to say that he was merely trying to investigate the existence of aliens and UFOs. He also mentioned an American conspiracy to suppress knowledge of so-called "free energy" and the existence of antigravity systems.

If McKinnon is convicted in the United States, his UFO research could result in a 70-year prison sentence and up to $1.75 million in fines.

Source (http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/topnews/wpn-60-20060511UFOHuntingHackerToBeExtradited.html)

Jeremy
May 12th, 2006, 03:08 AM
Something that wasn't mentioned in this particular article goes to why he is worried about being sent to Guantanamo and getting tied to terrorism. While he is obviously a smart guy, he made the stupid mistake of breaking into U.S. computers just days after 9/11, when the country was on high alert. I've been following his story for some time and although I believe he really is into things like UFOs, I don't buy his story of just looking for intel on UFO coverups while in U.S. networks. On September 23, 2001, while we were still recovering from the twin tower attack, he allegedly deleted key files necessary to power some computers on the network. That's just being a jerk. Also in an interview he gave last year he seemed less interested in UFO information he supposedly found, than in his own ability to get into the computer undetected (neverminding the fact that he was actually caught). This guy's story isn't about U-F-Os. It's about E-G-O. I always laugh when these super-hackers do interviews patting themselves on the back... from behind bars. ub3r-p053r d00d