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Justice Has Been Served


Shootinalloveryourface
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Shootinalloveryourface

Can someone please change the thread title to The Possibility Of Justice Being Served Has Marginally Increased ?

 

Thank you

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Haha, the Daily Mail have DOX'ed 'Jordy' there is a photo of his home as well!




British teenager, 18, arrested in connection with Christmas cyber attacks on Playstation and Xbox networks after joint FBI and British investigation


By JENNIFER SMITH FOR MAILONLINE


PUBLISHED: 17:35, 16 January 2015 | UPDATED: 01:18, 17 January 2015


An 18-year-old has been arrested in connection with Christmas cyber attacks on Playstation and Xbox networks following a joint investigation between the FBI and British police.


The 'quiet' teenager, named locally as Jordan Lee-Bevan, was arrested during a raid at his semi-detached home in Southport, Merseyside, today, with officers seizing computers as he was taken away in a police car.


It comes after thousands were refused access to Sony and Microsoft servers over the Christmas period.


An 18-year-old has been arrested in connection with an ongoing investigation into hacking which disrupted thousands of Xboxes and Playstations over Christmas


The cyber-attack, thought to have been created by hacker group Lizard Squad, shut down some services for five days.


Scores of gamers were left unable to play Christmas gifts or interact online as a result of the disruption.


While it is unclear whether today's arrest is in direct connection with the Christmas day attack, investigating authorities said it was 'significant' in the pursuit of cyber crime.


The teenager, described by neighbours as 'quiet', is suspected of unauthorised access with intent to commit further offences and threats to kill.

He is also suspected of 'swatting', a cyber activity which involves making hoax calls via Skype. In this case he is thought to have targeted US law enforcement agencies, and is also suspected of threatening to kill.


The latest arrested follows that of Vincent Omari, 22, from Twickenham, south-west London, who has been linked to the lizard squad and was detained shortly after the cyber attack.


He was questioned on suspicion of fraud by false representation and Computer Misuse Act offences before being bailed to March 10.


Omari, who is a student of network security and ethical hacking, has said he is simply a spokesman for Lizard Squad - and denied having any part in the attack on Sony and Microsoft.


Craig Jones, Head of the Cyber Crime Unit at South East Regional Organised Crime Unit said: 'We are still at the early stages of the investigation and there is still much work to be done.


Police arrived at the home of the teenager (above) where, neighbours said, they were allowed entry


'We will continue to work closely with the FBI to identify those who commit offences and hold them to account.


'Offences referred to as ‘swatting’ involve law enforcement forces in the United States receiving hoax calls via Skype for a major incident in which Swat teams were dispatched.


DCC Peter Goodman, National Policing Lead for Cyber Security at the Association of Police Officers added the arrest was 'significant' in ongoing investigations.


''This arrest demonstrates that we will continue to pursue those who commit crime with the false perception they are protected within their own homes or hiding behind anonymous online personas.


'We urge industry, communities and individuals to protect themselves by implementing basic security measures whilst taking full advantage and enjoyment the opportunities the world wide web provides.'


Neighbours in the quiet residential street expressed their shock at the development which came as a fleet of police cars descended on the area this morning.

One, who did not wish to be named, said: 'He is very quiet young man. I don't know him very well - he stayed in his bedroom a lot.

'I haven't seen the family yet but I imagine it will be a big shock.


Another added: 'He is very quiet. I'd see him coming in and out of the house but he didn't really say a word.




Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
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Southport teenager arrested over cyber attacks on Sony PlayStation and Xbox systems is released on bail


Jan 18, 2015 19:56 By Andrew Brown


Teenager told to return to speak to police in May


An 18-year-old Southport man arrested for ‘swatting’ and denial of service offences has been released on bail.


The teenager was arrested in a joint British and FBI-led operation following cyber attacks on Sony PlayStation and Xbox systems last year.


The 18-year-old was held on suspicion of unauthorised access to computer material. He was also detained for alleged unauthorised access with intent to commit further offences and threats to kill, the South East Regional Organised Crime Unit (SEROCU) said.


He was arrested on Friday (January 16) in Boundary Street, Southport, on suspicion of unauthorised access to computer material contrary to section 1 of Computer Misuse Act 1990, unauthorised access with intent to commit further offences contrary to section 2 of Computer Misuse Act 1990 and threats to kill contrary to Section 16 of Offences against the Person Act 1861.


The arrest was part of an operation which focused on the denial of service attack of Sony Playstation and Xbox systems in 2014 and ‘swatting’ offences.


The operation was conducted by South East Regional Organised Crime Unit (SEROCU) Cyber Crime Unit, supported by the National Cyber Crime Unit (NCCU), worked closely with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on the operation.


The man has been released on bail until May 18.
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Daily Mail? It's probably all wrong or about the effect on the Royal Family.

 

They'll also state that they've done a poll and 70% of readers blame immigrants.

 

I f*cking hate that rag of lies.

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Daily Mail? It's probably all wrong or about the effect on the Royal Family.

 

Even a broken (analogue) clock is right twice a day.

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Zoots Remuvah

Bet his mother was livid when the feds turned up at the door...

 

 

oh and soap-dropping jokes aside, if he's going to end up in a Yooung Offendrs Institute, he's gonna be purple by the time he comes out... They places are f*&cking jungles...

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Bet his mother was livid when the feds turned up at the door...

 

 

oh and soap-dropping jokes aside, if he's going to end up in a Yooung Offendrs Institute, he's gonna be purple by the time he comes out... They places are f*&cking jungles...

 

 

He's 18. You need to be under 17 to be tried as a minor in the UK. He'll go to big boy prison and learn how to shank people, or get shanked. Whichever happens first.

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I remember some boy got arrested for a tweet and the daily fail loved it...

 

this world is a sick place run by genuinely evil people in the shadows and these things are meant to distract us...

 

I'm not saying the real people shouldn't be arrested more pointing out that the daily mails original owners had ties to slavery

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Bet his mother was livid when the feds turned up at the door...

 

 

oh and soap-dropping jokes aside, if he's going to end up in a Yooung Offendrs Institute, he's gonna be purple by the time he comes out... They places are f*&cking jungles...

 

 

Another 18 year old got 6 months a couple of years ago for hacking into someone's email and doing hoax phone calls.

 

18 year-old TeamPoison hacker Junaid Hussain aka TriCk hacked into a Gmail account used by Katy Kay, a former special advisor to Tony Blair and accessed and published personal details of 150 contacts including Tony Blair and family. Also used Skype to swamp UK anti-terrorism hotline with hoax calls.

Guilty plea. Six months youth detention sentence.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/internet-security/9432459/Team-Poison-hacker-who-posted-Tony-Blairs-details-is-jailed.html

 

'Team Poison' hacker who posted Tony Blair's details is jailed
A hacker who stole Tony Blair's personal details and bombarded the anti-terrorism hotline with calls was jailed for six months today.
Telegraph News By Telegraph reporters
2:17PM BST 27 Jul 2012
Junaid Hussain, 18, put the sensitive information on the internet for all to see after accessing former special advisor Katy Kay's e-mail account and copying her contacts.
His barrister claimed his crimes were no worse than the antics of Bullingdon Club members.
Using the online alias 'Trick', Hussain posted phone numbers and addresses, as well as the ex-PM's email address and National Insurance number.
Other data related to his wife Cherie, sister-in-law Lyndsey Booth, his children and friends, as well as sitting MPs and Lords.
Hussain also bombarded the national anti-terror hotline with prank calls, leaving the numbers 'permanently engaged' after calling it 111 times in three days.
His actions, as leader of hackers group Team Poison, saw the centre's seven lines overwhelmed by an 850 per cent increase in calls, Southwark Crown Court heard.
He later posted recordings of the conversations on the internet, including a lengthy call in which he eavesdropped after a police operator mistakenly failed to hang up properly.
Passing sentence, Judge Nicholas Loraine-Smith QC said: "You told the probation officer that someone suggested Tony Blair's PA should be a target.
"You succeeded in hacking the personal account of Ms Kay, with some 150 contacts.
"Some or all of those were then posted on the internet. She received abusive calls and emails from here and abroad.
"This was a gross invasion of her privacy and those of her associates, for which you were responsible.
"There were very real dangers in details of her associates being freely available."
Turning to the hoax calls, he added: "These not only resulted in an appreciable waste of police time, but could have stopped genuine callers getting through. There is no doubt both of these offences deserve custodial sentences."
The prank calls to the anti-terror hotline were made between December last year and April this year, with some hoaxers using specialist software to disguise their voices.
Recordings of the conversations were later posted to YouTube.
A probation report said Hussain had organised the pranks "with the intention that others would abuse the staff for his own amusement."
Richard Milne, prosecutig, said Team Poison's actions caused the lines to be 'constantly blocked' to genuine callers who wanted to report suspicions of terrorist activity.
"Most of the staff were simply dealing with hoax and crank calls," he added.
"There was no useful information being given.
"It was so sustained, so deliberately, so concentrated, that in effect it was simply a denial of service attack."
In one call, a hoaxer ended the conversation: "It's been fun hacking into your phones all day, but I'm going to bed now."
The court heard Ms Kay had started working for Windrush, one of the companies run by Mr Blair, in 2008.
Hussain managed to break into her Google Mail account, stealing 150 contacts from her address book along with the messages in her inbox.
Mr Milne said: "In the new year of 2011, Ms Kay became aware colleagues of hers had started receiving emails from her account which she had not sent.
"She changed her passport and reported the matter to the police."
In June that year, Ms Kay was contacted by a journalist from the Sunday Times who told her he had found information from her emails on the internet.
Hussain was arrested on April 12, having earlier boasted on Twitter that he was "still waiting to be raided."
Open on his computer at the time was a Facebook chat window in which he bragged of "hacking a number of different people and organisations, including Tony Blair".
In a witness statement read to the court, Ms Kay said: "I felt that this was an invasion of my privacy.
"I was upset and embarrassed that my details, and personal details of friends, had been made public because of who I had worked for.
"I felt I or my friends could be targeted for abuse or worse."
Hussain recently sat his A-Levels and was previously offered places at two universities to study computer forensics.
He has been working full-time as an accounts ledger since the summer holidays began.
Ben Cooper, defending, said his client now "realises the stupidity of what he has done."
The barrister then referred to the alleged antics of David Cameron and Boris Johnson when they were students at Oxford University.
He said many members of the infamous Bullingdon Club at Oxford University were guilty of 'smashing up restaurants' and behaving foolishly in their youth.
"Thankfully, in this case, national security and counter-terrorism was not in fact compromised," he added.
"These were children and teenagers acting by way of pranks - they weren't terrorists in any way, shape or form."
The barrister added: "When one meets him, he is a very shy, unassuming young man.
"He does now understand the very great seriousness of what he has done.
Hussain, of Birmingham, admitted conspiring to commit public nuisance between January 1, 2010, and April 14, 2012, and causing a computer to perform a function to secure unauthorised access to a program or data.
A third charge, of doing 'defacing' numerous websites hosted by Hampton Media Services between June 3 and 7, 2010, was ordered to lie on file.

 

Tony Blair bod's Gmail hack teen gets 6 months
'TriCK' also sentenced for anti-terror hotline prank
27 Jul 2012 at 14:43, Brid-Aine Parnell
Teen hacker Junaid Hussain was sentenced to six months in a youth detention lock-up today for breaking into an email account linked to Tony Blair among other attacks.
His defence barrister had attempted to pass his actions off as no worse than anything Prime Minister David Cameron or London Mayor Boris Johnson might have done in their youth.
Hussain, 18, pleaded guilty to two counts of computer crookery back in July: for hacking into the email account of an aide to former UK premier Tony Blair and flooding the anti-terror hotline with nuisance calls. He was sentenced to three months in a youth detention facility for each offence in Southwark Crown Court.
Ben Cooper, speaking for the defence, said that Hussain had been a young teenager when he committed the offences, between the ages of 13 and 17, and had shown a lack of judgement typical for his age.
As an example, he said that Cameron and Johnson had been involved in a number of shenanigans in their youth, referring to the infamous Bullingdon Club. The pair were allegedly involved in all sorts of antics when they were students at Oxford University, including smashing up restaurants.
Prosecution barrister Richard Milne went through the charges again for the sentencing hearing, including explaining the consequences of Hussain's offences.
The Katie Kay hack
The first offence was his hack into the Gmail account of one of Blair's advisors, Katie Kay. After gaining access to the account, Hussain, also known by the handle TriCK, posted contact details from the account's address book and other personal information online. The info included the former prime minister's national insurance number.
Judge Nicholas Loraine-Smith told the court Kay had said in her statement that the hack was an invasion of her privacy.
"I was upset and embarrassed that my details and personal details of friends had been made public because of who I worked for," she said. "I felt I or my friends could be targeted by abuse or worse."
Terror line DoS
Hussain and his hacktivist group TeaMp0isoN also flooded the UK's national anti-terrorism hotline, which takes calls from the public for tips on terrorist activity, with automated calls. So-called call-bombs are similar to a denial-of-service attack on a computer, and aim to disrupt the offered service.
As well as the automated calls, callers from the group also phoned in to abuse the operators, recording the conversations and then posting them online as well. Hussain was adamant that he had not been one of the actual callers, but pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge over the calls.
TeaMp0isoN apparently believed they were disrupting MI6 operations rather than police activities. Although none of the recorded calls picked up any sensitive information or affected national security, they did stop genuine calls from coming through, any of which could have contained valuable information, Milne pointed out.
Defence team: 'He's matured'
Defence barrister Ben Cooper told the court that Hussain had grown up a lot since his arrest and prosecution, was successfully working full time over the summer and had finished his A levels and received offers to study at university.
He repeated a number of times that Hussain was very frightened of being locked up and asked the court to consider a suspended sentence.
But the judge wasn't moved by the arguments. He pointed out that the offences started when Hussain was young, but they continued right up until he was caught.
"He's told me in his letter and he's told the probation officer that he's very frightened of custody and I couldn't understand that more," Judge Nicholas Lorraine-Smith said.
Cooper also talked about Hussain's commitment to education and bettering himself and his strong family background, supported by references from family members and others. However, the judge said there was more to consider than his good character.
"In sentencing cases such as this, there has to be an element of his past and his family and his future, but there has to be an aspect of deterrence," he said. "I've been provided with an enormous amount of information about him, but I have a number of duties."
After hearing both sides, the judge retired for 15 minutes before coming back with his sentencing decision.
Hussain has been out on bail on a restricted basis, including electronic tagging and a curfew between 7pm and 7am. As that curfew is longer than nine hours, it counts as a type of custody, so Hussain will have half of the days he's been out on bail – 52 – counted as time served.
The judge said Hussain was likely to be freed in time to take up one of his university places in October.

 

Bet his mother was livid when the feds turned up at the door...

 

 

oh and soap-dropping jokes aside, if he's going to end up in a Yooung Offendrs Institute, he's gonna be purple by the time he comes out... They places are f*&cking jungles...

 

 

He's 18. You need to be under 17 to be tried as a minor in the UK. He'll go to big boy prison and learn how to shank people, or get shanked. Whichever happens first.

 

 

Jordy was 18 when the offences were 'allegedly' committed.

 

The other guy in the news articles I posted above who was 13-17 when he did the hack/hoaxes, he got a 6 months Youth Detention sentence.

 

So quite possibly he will be going to the 'big house'!

Edited by hercules1975
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"He's told me in his letter and he's told the probation officer that he's very frightened of custody and I couldn't understand that more," Judge Nicholas Lorraine-Smith said.

 

Lol. So he should be.

 

If you can't do the time, etc..

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Zoots Remuvah

 

 

Jordy was 18 when the offences were 'allegedly' committed.

 

The other guy in the news articles I posted above who was 13-17 when he did the hack/hoaxes, he got a 6 months Youth Detention sentence.

 

So quite possibly he will be going to the 'big house'!

 

 

 

UK correctional facilities work as <21 years, Young Offenders Institute - >21 years, adult prison..

 

Used to be 25 was the cut-off age for some reason..

 

Be serious lolz if he ends up in Feltham.. can just imagine the London yoot/gangbangers who couldn't play over Christmas might like to give him a shank shaped lesson....

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Jordy was 18 when the offences were 'allegedly' committed.

 

The other guy in the news articles I posted above who was 13-17 when he did the hack/hoaxes, he got a 6 months Youth Detention sentence.

 

So quite possibly he will be going to the 'big house'!

 

 

 

UK correctional facilities work as <21 years, Young Offenders Institute - >21 years, adult prison..

 

Used to be 25 was the cut-off age for some reason..

 

Be serious lolz if he ends up in Feltham.. can just imagine the London yoot/gangbangers who couldn't play over Christmas might like to give him a shank shaped lesson....

 

 

Actually, we're all wrong.

 

10-17 is a young offender and would be imprisoned as such, with other young offenders.

 

18-25 is treated as an adult, but only goes to prison with 18-25 year olds.

 

25+ is "full adult" prison.

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Zoots Remuvah

yeah but it's still a YOI you get sent to under the age of 21..

 

quoth wiki

 

 

Her Majesty's Young Offender Institution (or HMYOI) is a type of British prison intended for offenders aged between 18 and 20,[1] although some prisons (particularly Ashfield[2] and Huntercombe[3]) cater for younger offenders from ages 15 to 17, who are classed as juvenile offenders.[4] Typically those aged under 15 will be held in a Secure Children's Home and those over 15 will be held in either a Young Offender Institution or Secure Training Centre.[5] Generally a young offender is regarded as such until the date of their 21st or 22nd birthday, whereupon he or she will be sent to an adult prison or can remain in the YOI until they turn 22 if deemed appropriate.

 

 

Trust me, I should know...

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yeah but it's still a YOI you get sent to under the age of 21..

 

quoth wiki

 

 

Her Majesty's Young Offender Institution (or HMYOI) is a type of British prison intended for offenders aged between 18 and 20,[1] although some prisons (particularly Ashfield[2] and Huntercombe[3]) cater for younger offenders from ages 15 to 17, who are classed as juvenile offenders.[4] Typically those aged under 15 will be held in a Secure Children's Home and those over 15 will be held in either a Young Offender Institution or Secure Training Centre.[5] Generally a young offender is regarded as such until the date of their 21st or 22nd birthday, whereupon he or she will be sent to an adult prison or can remain in the YOI until they turn 22 if deemed appropriate.

 

 

Trust me, I should know...

 

My source disagrees, and I'd consider it considerably more reliable than wikipedia...

 

https://www.gov.uk/age-of-criminal-responsibility

 

And I trust nothing I read on here unless I personally know the poster. Don't take that personally though :p

Edited by Furry_Monkey
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Zoots Remuvah

 

 

My source disagrees, and I'd consider it considerably more reliable than wikipedia...

 

https://www.gov.uk/age-of-criminal-responsibility

 

And I trust nothing I read on here unless I personally know the poster. Don't take that personally though :p

 

 

 

Govt contradicts itself it seems:

 

https://www.gov.uk/young-people-in-custody/what-custody-is-like-for-young-people

 

 

Young offender institutions:

  • are run by the Prison Service and private companies
  • are for people aged 15 to 21 (people under 18 are held in different buildings)
  • house between 60 to 400 people, split into ‘wings’ of 30 to 60 people
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My source disagrees, and I'd consider it considerably more reliable than wikipedia...

 

https://www.gov.uk/age-of-criminal-responsibility

 

And I trust nothing I read on here unless I personally know the poster. Don't take that personally though :p

 

 

 

Govt contradicts itself it seems:

 

https://www.gov.uk/young-people-in-custody/what-custody-is-like-for-young-people

 

 

Young offender institutions:

  • are run by the Prison Service and private companies
  • are for people aged 15 to 21 (people under 18 are held in different buildings)
  • house between 60 to 400 people, split into ‘wings’ of 30 to 60 people

 

 

That doesn't contradict it at all - it breaks it down further. Anyway, I'm bored with this conversation now. Let's just wait and see what happens to the little scrote.

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My source disagrees, and I'd consider it considerably more reliable than wikipedia...

 

https://www.gov.uk/age-of-criminal-responsibility

 

And I trust nothing I read on here unless I personally know the poster. Don't take that personally though :p

 

 

 

Govt contradicts itself it seems:

 

https://www.gov.uk/young-people-in-custody/what-custody-is-like-for-young-people

 

 

Young offender institutions:

  • are run by the Prison Service and private companies
  • are for people aged 15 to 21 (people under 18 are held in different buildings)
  • house between 60 to 400 people, split into ‘wings’ of 30 to 60 people

 

 

shocked lol....

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Zoots Remuvah

Not really shocked, and the gov.uk website is a complete and utter mess..

 

Lots of agencies have migrated over to it in recent years and so much is missing/out of date.. only the other day I was trying to find annual returns for some trade unions and they all seemed to have vanished.. Took a bit of effort to get the information finally.. even had to write directly to the Certification officer to get what I was after and even then it was via an archived web page at the National Archives rather than on the gov.uk site it should be located..

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tenpennyisplainevil

If he gets sentenced to prison he's in for a very bad time. In youth prisons they have gaming systems, he DDoS'd the online service of those gaming systems and affected everyone he's about to meet in that prison. They're so gonna gang up on this guy :lol:
And no he won't be raped, that only happens in America: the land of the fa**ots.

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I'm surprised two are from the UK

 

Where the f*ck is Southport?

 

how do you not know where southport is if your from the UK? near liverpool in merseyside

 

 

For some of us, geography remains an arcane mystery. I didn't know either. I'd have guessed in the south, probably near the sea. :)

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I wonder if he's a Liverpool fan??

Motherf*cker will definitely be walking alone....

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little toe rags

 

 

Toe Rags...?

 

 

toe rag

 

"The definition derives from old England where convicts used to tie bits of shirt around their toes and feet as a make shift sock, hence "toe rag" means scoundrel, criminal, thief, indencent/unlawful person etc. It is sometiem seen spelt Tow Rag because the original context has long since been obsolete."

 

:v:

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