Dear Friends:

The lead story in the print Guardian London (07 03 2012) : 'King of hackers 
unmasked as FBI informant' spreads over nearly three full pages
and it is not possible to copy all the articles. But what I can do is to  
'Profile Sabu', an accompanying piece by Josh Halliday under the heading
'Genius caught out by schoolboy error. Strangely enough while copying, the 
article appears to have gained length (it copied a related article, I think but 
the facts are the same). 


-bhuban



The world's most notorious computer hacker has been working as an informer for 
the FBI for at least the last six months, it emerged on Tuesday, providing 
information that has helped contribute to the charging of five others, 
including two Britons, for computer hackingoffences.
Hector Xavier Monsegur, an unemployed 28-year-old Puerto Rican living in New 
York, was unmasked as "Sabu", the leader of the LulzSec hacking group that has 
been behind a wave of cyber raids against American corporations including 
Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, the intelligence consultancy Stratfor, 
British and American law enforcement bodies, and the Irish political party Fine 
Gael.
It was revealed that he had been charged with 12 criminal counts of conspiracy 
to engage in computer hacking and other crimes last summer, crimes which carry 
a maximum sentence of 124 years and six months in prison. According to 
indictments filed in a Manhattan federal court, he secretly pleaded guilty on 
15 August last year.
Despite that, Sabu carried on with his aggressive online persona as the LulzSec 
"leader", with the father of two going so far as to deny online – the day after 
his secret guilty plea – that he had "snitched" on his friends.
His online "hacker" activity continued until very recently, with a tweet sent 
by him in the last 24 hours saying: "The feds at this moment are scouring our 
lives without warrants. Without judges approval. This needs to change. Asap."
In a US court document, the FBI's informant – there described as CW – "acting 
under the direction of the FBI" helped facilitate the publication of what was 
thought to be an embarrassing leak of conference call between the FBI and the 
UK's Serious and Organised Crime Agency in February.
Officers from both sides of the Atlantic were heard discussing the progress of 
various hacking investigations in the call.
A second document shows that Monsegur – styled this time as CW-1 – provided an 
FBI-owned computer to facilitate the release of 5m emails taken from US 
security consultancy Stratfor and which are now being published by WikiLeaks. 
That suggests the FBI may have had an inside track on discussions between 
Julian Assange of WikiLeaks, andAnonymous, another hacking group, about the 
leaking of thousands of confidential emails and documents.
The indictments mark the most significant strike by law enforcement officials 
against the amateur hacker groups that have sprung out of Anonymous. These 
groups, which include LulzSec, have cost businesses millions of pounds and 
exposed the credit card details and passwords of nearly 1 million people.
An FBI official told Fox News, which broke the story: "This is devastating to 
the organisation … we're chopping off the head of LulzSec."
But Graham Cluley, a consultant with the security company Sophos, warned news 
of the arrests, and of Monsegur's betrayal, could trigger a wave of fresh 
attacks by furious hackers.
"There are plenty of Anonymous sympathisers out there who will continue to 
steal information and pass it to Anonymous and WikiLeaks. LulzSec were more 
sophisticated than most, knew more about computer hacking. But that doesn't 
mean that there aren't others out there with those skills too."
The five charged by US authorities on Tuesday – two in the UK, two in Ireland 
and one in Chicago – amounted to a sweep of names who are alleged to have 
carried out all of the most public hacking attacks in the past year.
One of the people named in the indictment, Jake Davis, already faces a number 
of charges in the UK relating to alleged hacking by LulzSec. Davis, of Lerwick, 
Shetland, was on Tuesday charged in the US with two counts of computer hacking 
conspiracy.
Ryan Ackroyd – a 25-year-old from Doncaster who is said to have used the names 
"kayla", "lol" and "lolspoon" – was also charged on two counts of alleged 
computer hacking conspiracy. A statement from the US Attorney's office in New 
York said that Ackroyd was being interviewed on Tuesday by the Metropolitan 
police. Each count of computer hacking conspiracy carries a sentence of up to 
10 years in jail.
Scotland Yard is also running parallel inquiries. One inquiry involves Ackroyd, 
Jake Davis, and two other people including a 17-year-old boy in connection with 
their alleged activities within LulzSec.
Ackroyd was charged in the UK on Tuesday night with two counts of conspiracy to 
"do an unauthorised act with intent to impair or with recklessness impairing of 
an operation of a computer", police said.
The 17-year-old boy has been charged with two computer conspiracy offences. It 
is understood that it is unlikely anyone would be extradited before UK trials 
had concluded.
Four people have now been charged by Scotland Yard in connection with hacking 
into a number of websites including that of the Serious Organised Crime Agency.
LulzSec was a hacker "crew" of about 10 people whose infamous run began with an 
attack in May 2011 on the Fox.com site, and then on the US X-Factor competition 
for which they released passwords and profiles of 73,000 contestants. It 
quickly escalated to an attack against Sony Pictures, followed by a security 
company and a number of online games companies.
But their downfall came after they hacked into InfraGard, a non-profit 
organisation affiliated with the FBI, and then attacked the websites of the 
CIA, the US Congress and the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency.
LulzSec's existing members began to worry about government retribution. 
Although they hacked into the News International systems on 18 July, changing 
the front page of The Sun's website, the police and other hackers were on their 
tail. One called The Jester – believed to be a former member of the US military 
– who normally attacks jihadist websites, suggested on 24 June that Sabu was an 
IT consultant based in New York.
The two Irish individuals charged are Darren Martyn, 25, of Galway, Ireland, on 
two charges of computer hacking conspiracy, Donncha O'Cearrbhail, 19, of Birr, 
Ireland, on one charge of computer hacking conspiracy and one charge of 
unlawfully intercepted wire communication, which carries a sentence of up to 
five years. O'Cearrbhail was arrested by Irish police on Tuesday.
The fifth person charged is Jeremy Hammond, 27, of Chicago, US, who was 
arrested and charged on Monday for alleged offences relating to the December 
2011 hacking of global intelligence firm Strategic Forecasting. He is charged 
with one count of computer hacking conspiracy, one count of computer hacking, 
and one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud.





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