[ISN] Briton pleads guilty to US nuclear lab hacking attack

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Mon Nov 03 2003 - 00:24:08 PST

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    http://www.computerweekly.com/articles/article.asp?liArticleID=126141
    
    by Bill Goodwin 
    31 October 2003 
    
    A teenage computer student has pleaded guilty to hacking into IT
    systems at an American nuclear weapons laboratory.
    
    Joseph James McElroy, 18, a first-year undergraduate at Exeter
    University, admitted hacking into 17 computer systems at the Fermi
    National Accelerator laboratory at a hearing at Bow Street Magistrates
    court in London on Friday.
    
    The court heard that the teenager hacked into Fermilab computers on 25
    June 2002 and used them to store hundreds of gigabytes of copyrighted
    film and music files.
    
    McElroy later told police that he had devised a hacking tool with a
    group of friends and fellow hackers, and had password protected the
    files so that they could be shared among the group.
    
    Technicians at the laboratory, which is responsible for ensuring the
    safety and integrity of US nuclear weapons, discovered the problem
    after noticing that scheduled back-ups were taking longer than normal.
    
    The laboratory, near Chicago, was forced to close the affected
    computer systems down for three days and spend £20,000 in repair
    costs. Although research data was left inaccessible while the repairs
    were carried out, no data was lost, the court heard.
    
    The teenager was arrested at his parents home in London following a
    joint investigation by the Department of Energy and Scotland Yard’s
    Computer Crime Unit.
    
    He told police that he and a group of hacker friends had been breaking
    into university computer systems and using them to store and
    distribute film and music files.
    
    McElroy claimed he targeted universities because he thought that they
    did not have to pay internet access charges, and made a point of not
    hacking into corporate systems.
    
    The court heard that McElroy was under the impression that the
    Fermilab computers were owned by a university, and had not realised
    they were part of a US government laboratory.
    
    Fermilab has admitted it had a flaw in its authentication systems and
    has since made improvements.
    
    The case was adjourned pending reports pending pre-sentencing reports
    from the probation service.
    
    McElroy did not gain access to classified material or endanger
    national security, lawyers said.
    
    
    
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