Twitter Hacker Who Turned Celebrity Accounts Into Crypto Shills Gets Prison Sentence

admin

[](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=crime) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=twitter) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=security) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=social) [Twitter Hacker Who Turned Celebrity Accounts Into Crypto Shills Gets Prison Sentence](//yro.slashdot.org/story/23/06/26/2021257/twitter-hacker-who-turned-celebrity-accounts-into-crypto-shills-gets-prison-sentence) (gizmodo.com) An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: One of the cybercriminals behind With all charges combined, O’Connor faced a maximum of 77 years in prison, per a Reuters report, while prosecutors called for a seven-year sentence.Ultimately, he…

image[](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=crime) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=twitter) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=security) [](//yro.slashdot.org/index2.pl?fhfilter=social)

[Twitter Hacker Who Turned Celebrity Accounts Into Crypto Shills Gets Prison Sentence](//yro.slashdot.org/story/23/06/26/2021257/twitter-hacker-who-turned-celebrity-accounts-into-crypto-shills-gets-prison-sentence) (gizmodo.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: One of the cybercriminals behind

With all charges combined, O’Connor faced a maximum of 77 years in prison, per a Reuters report, while prosecutors called for a seven-year sentence.Ultimately, he will likely only serve about half of his five years, after having already spent nearly 2.5 years in pre-trial custody, Judge Jed S.Rakoff said during the Friday hearing, according to TechCrunch.Along with his fellow hackers, O’Connor “used his sophisticated technological abilities for malicious purposes — conducting a complex SIM swap attack to steal large amounts of cryptocurrency, hacking Twitter, conducting computer intrusions to take over social media accounts, and even cyberstalking two victims, including a minor victim,” according to a

An investigation by the New York State Department of Financial Services determined that the breach was made possible because Twitter “lacked adequate cybersecurity protections,” according to an October 2020 report.O’Connor and co were able to gain access to the social platform’s internal systems through a simple scheme of calling Twitter employees posing as the company IT department.They were able to trick four Twitter workers into providing their login credentials.

The FBI launched its own investigation, which found that O’Connor and his co-conspirators had managed to transfer account ownership to unauthorized users — sometimes themselves, and sometimes to others willing to pay for the accounts.O’Connor himself paid $10,000 to take over one specific, unnamed account, according to a Department of Justice press statement from May.In addition to the Twitter hack, O’Connor also pleaded guilty to stealing nearly $800,000 from a crypto company by SIM swapping at least three executives’ phone numbers.He further admitted to blackmailing an unnamed public figure via Snapchat and swatting a 16-year-old girl.

2020’s major Twitter hackwas sentenced to five years in U.S.

federal prison on Friday.Joseph O’Connor (AKA “PlugwalkJoe”), a 24-year-old British citizen, previously pleaded guilty to seven charges associated with the digital attack.

He was arrested in Spain in 2021 and extradited to the U.S.in April of this year.In addition to the five years of jail time, O’Connor was also sentenced to three additional years under supervised release and ordered to pay back more than $790,000 in illicitly obtained funds, according to a news release from the U.S.Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of New York.

Previously, Graham Ivan Clark, another one of the hackers involved who was 17 at the time of the attack, pleaded guilty to related charges and was sentenced to three years in prison.

With all charges combined, O’Connor faced a maximum of 77 years in prison, per a Reuters report, while prosecutors called for a seven-year sentence.Ultimately, he will likely only serve about half of his five years, after having already spent nearly 2.5 years in pre-trial custody, Judge Jed S.Rakoff said during the Friday hearing, according to TechCrunch.Along with his fellow hackers, O’Connor “used his sophisticated technological abilities for malicious purposes — conducting a complex SIM swap attack to steal large amounts of cryptocurrency, hacking Twitter, conducting computer intrusions to take over social media accounts, and even cyberstalking two victims, including a minor victim,” according to a

previous statementgiven by prosecuting U.S.Attorney Damian Williams.[…]

An investigation by the New York State Department of Financial Services determined that the breach was made possible because Twitter “lacked adequate cybersecurity protections,” according to an October 2020 report.O’Connor and co were able to gain access to the social platform’s internal systems through a simple scheme of calling Twitter employees posing as the company IT department.They were able to trick four Twitter workers into providing their login credentials.

The FBI launched its own investigation, which found that O’Connor and his co-conspirators had managed to transfer account ownership to unauthorized users — sometimes themselves, and sometimes to others willing to pay for the accounts.

O’Connor himself paid $10,000 to take over one specific, unnamed account, according to a Department of Justice press statement from May.In addition to the Twitter hack, O’Connor also pleaded guilty to stealing nearly $800,000 from a crypto company by SIM swapping at least three executives’ phone numbers.He further admitted to blackmailing an unnamed public figure via Snapchat and swatting a 16-year-old girl..

Leave a Reply

Next Post

John J. Ray III and Team Say FTX Crypto Exchange Owed Customers $8.7B.

share on Facebook share on LinkedIn share on Twitter A new report from the FTX team that’s digging through the financial guts of the failed exchange said the company owed its customers $8.7 billion after commingling and misusing their deposits, and senior executives started hiding that trouble as early as August 2022. About $6.4 billion…
John J. Ray III and Team Say FTX Crypto Exchange Owed Customers $8.7B.

Subscribe US Now