Barrett Brown, who became a cause c. Brown was facing a possible eight-and-a-half years in prison after pleading guilty earlier this year to two charges related to aiding-and-abetting and obstruction of justice and a separate charge involving threats he made to an FBI agent. His attorneys sought a sentence of 30 months with consideration for time served and other mitigating factors, which would have left him with just two months remaining in jail. Brown has been in custody without bail since he was arrested in September 2012 while in the middle of an online chat. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . After being implicated in the Stratfor breach, Barrett Brown initially faced a potential sentence of 8.5 years. Ultimately, he received a reduced sentence of 5 years.. Barrett Brown, Stratfor Hack, Cybercrime, FBI Threats, Cybersecurity Case. . Dave Wreski
LulzSec Hacker "Topiary" famously tweeted: "You cannot arrest an idea." Perhaps not, but in the case of Topiary, revealed to be Jake Davis, now 20, you can be sentenced to 24 months in a "young offenders institute" for two counts of conspiracy to impair the operation of a computer, to be followed by a five-year serious crime prevention order that can restrict where he can travel and which jobs he'll be allowed to take. . Davis' sentence was handed out in a London courtroom Thursday, where he appeared this week for sentencing with Ryan Cleary (Viral), Mustafa al-Bassam (Tflow) and Ryan Ackroyd (Kayla). All were participants in the Anonymous spin-off known as LulzSec, which launched online attacks against numerous organizations' websites, including the CIA, Britain's Serious Organized Crime Agency (SOCA) and National Health Service (NHS), 20th Century Fox, News International, and Sony Pictures Entertainment, from which it also leaked customer credentials and credit card numbers. The link for this article located at Information Week is no longer available. . Former LulzSec member Jake Davis sentenced for his role in attacks aimed at compromising computer networks and other associated crimes.. LulzSec Hackers,Cyber Crime,Legal Sentencing,Computer Attack,Hacking Group. . Anthony Pell
Notorious spammer Alan Ralsky has been jailed for more than four years over his role in a masterminding a stock fraud spam campaign that made him an estimated $2.7m.. Ralsky, 64, from West Bloomfield, near Detroit, Michigan, was sentenced to 51 months while his son-in-law, Scott Bradley, 48, was imprisoned for 40 months over the same pump and dump stock fraud conspiracy involving thinly-traded stocks. Each pleaded guilty to wire fraud, money laundering and violations of the CAN-SPAM Act. Two other co-conspirators, who also confessed their involvement in the scam, were sentenced on Monday. Five others face a sentencing hearing later on Tuesday. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . Ralsky, 64, from West Bloomfield, near Detroit, Michigan, was sentenced to 51 months while his son-i. notorious, spammer, ralsky, jailed, years, mastermind. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.