Briton accused of hacking Fox, PBS websites
By Shaya Tayefe Mohajer | Associated Press - LOS ANGELES
14th June 2012 11:10 AM
A 20-year-old Briton suspected of links
to the hacking group Lulz Security is accused of cracking into websites for a
Fox reality TV show, a venerable news show and other sites, federal prosecutors
said Wednesday.
A federal grand jury indicted Ryan Cleary on conspiracy and hacking charges for
allegedly conspiring with other Lulz Security, or LulzSec, members to attack
the website for the Fox show "The X-Factor," along with sites
belonging to PBS, Sony Pictures and others. Authorities said the hackers were
seeking to steal personal information and deface sites.
In a separate case, Cleary faces charges in the United Kingdom on allegations
that he and others hacked a law enforcement agency, the Serious Organized Crime
Agency, and various British music sites. He was taken into custody in March for
breaching his bail conditions in that case, his attorney in that case has said.
The indictment filed Tuesday alleges Cleary and his co-conspirators would
identify security vulnerabilities in companies' computer systems and use them
as opportunities to gain unauthorized access and, often, cause mayhem.
In one instance, the indictment alleges, Cleary conspired to steal the
confidential information of people who registered to get information on
auditions for the Fox talent competition "The X-Factor."
That hack was the first to be claimed by LulzSec, an offshoot of the larger
hacking group Anonymous, in tweets about its international hacking spree that
began in May 2011.
Later that month, LulzSec claimed to have hacked the website of the Public
Broadcasting Service, where a phony news story was posted claiming the dead
rapper Tupac Shakur was alive and living in New Zealand.
The post caused a stir on the site for "PBS NewsHour," an
award-winning broadcast news show, and came after the network aired a
documentary of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange that was deemed critical. PBS'
ombudsman at the time defended the program's treatment of Assange as
"tough but proper."
The indictment also alleges LulzSec and Cleary hacked into the computer systems
of Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. in June 2011 to steal confidential
information of users who had registered on the company's website.
Calls and emails to Fox, Sony and "The NewsHour" seeking comment and
confirmation were not immediately returned Wednesday.
Cleary faces a maximum of 25 years if convicted on all charges.
An after-hours call to Cleary's legal representative in London was not
returned. It was not immediately clear who would represent him in the United
States.
LulzSec also has claimed responsibility for hacking incidents not listed in
Cleary's indictment, including hacking the CIA's public-facing website and the
Atlanta chapter of an FBI partner organization called InfraGard.
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