Skip to main content

UK Hacker’s Latest US Extradition Appeal Fails

UK-hacker

A British man accused of hacking into American military computers has failed in his latest bid to avoid extradition to the U.S., his lawyer said Friday.

Gary McKinnon is charged with breaking into dozens of computers belonging to NASA, the U.S. Defense Department and several branches of the U.S. military soon after the Sept. 11 attacks. U.S. prosecutors have spent seven years seeking his extradition.

The 43-year-old claims he was searching for evidence of alien life, although prosecutors say he left a message on an Army computer criticizing U.S. foreign policy. The High Court decision denies McKinnon the possibility of taking his case to the country’s new Supreme Court — the latest in a series of blows to his campaign to remain in Britain.

Lord Justice Stanley Burnton said that extradition was “a lawful and proportionate response” to McKinnon’s alleged crimes and that the legal issues raised by the case were not important enough to be considered by the nation’s highest court.

McKinnon’s attorney, Karen Todner, said she was not giving up.

“The legal team are now considering our position and we will exhaust every avenue to prevent Gary’s extradition,” she said after the ruling.

She added that lawyers were considering taking the case back to the European Court of Human Rights, which has previously refused to stop his extradition.

McKinnon’s supporters argue that he is autistic and should not be put through the ordeal of a custodial sentence across the Atlantic. McKinnon has offered to plead guilty to a hacking charge in Britain in order to avoid extradition, but prosecutors here turned down the legal gambit earlier this year, saying the U.S. was the proper venue for a trial.

The case has attracted significant attention in Britain, where it has been a touchstone for debate about the country’s fast-track extradition treaty with Washington — signed in the wake of Sept. 11 — and wider U.S.-British relations.

McKinnon’s mother, Janis Sharp, said that her government was too willing to send its citizens to the U.S. “as sacrificial lambs” to safeguard the pair’s “special political relationship.”

“To use my desperately vulnerable son in this way is despicable, immoral and devoid of humanity,” she said after the ruling.

Opposition lawmaker David Davis said Britain had signed up to a set of agreements which “masquerading as anti-terror laws, actually disadvantaged a whole range of British citizens.”

Britain’s Home Office, which would ultimately be responsible for handling McKinnon’s extradition, said only that it had noted the decision. Todner said British officials had given her legal team two weeks to consider its options.

Topics
Dena Cassella
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Haole built. O'ahu grown
Hackers used 30,000 computers for record-breaking DDoS attack
An illustration of a grid of devices with one in red, infected device highlighted.

Hackers launched a record-breaking distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack over the weekend, employing a network of botnets to make requests from over 30,000 IP addresses.

While that isn't a big network of computers, the onslaught was able to exceed 71 million requests per second (rps), surpassing the previous record of 46 million rps set in June 2022 by 35%. This is what's known as a volumetric attack that consumes the target website's bandwidth by sending large amounts of data from multiple sources at once.

Read more
Great, hackers are now using ChatGPT to create malware
A laptop opened to the ChatGPT website.

A new threat has surfaced in the ChatGPT saga, with cybercriminals having developed a way to hack the AI chatbot and inundate it with malware commands.

The research firm Checkpoint has discovered that hackers have designed bots that can infiltrate OpenAI's GPT-3 API and alter its code so that it can generate malicious content, such as text that can be used for phishing emails and malware scripts.

Read more
Hackers dug deep in the massive LastPass security breach
The LastPass logo appears in front of a menacing hooded figure.

The cybersecurity breach that LastPass owner GoTo reported in November 2022 keeps getting worse as new details are revealed, calling into question the company's transparency on this serious issue.

It has been two months since GoTo shared the alarming news that hackers stole the usernames, passwords, email addresses, phone numbers, IP addresses, and even billing information of LastPass users. In GoTo's latest blog update, the company reported that several of its other products were compromised as well.

Read more