Forwarded from: William Knowles <wk@private> http://www.startribune.com/stories/789/5204679.html Paul Levy Star Tribune January 26, 2005 Jeffrey Lee Parson, the Hopkins teenager who unleashed an Internet worm that infected an estimated 48,000 computers and caused more than $1 million in damage, should be sentenced to 37 months in prison, according to a formal recommendation made by federal prosecutors today. Parson's sentencing is scheduled for Friday in U.S. District Court in Seattle. Parson, 19, who was arrested during his senior year at Hopkins High School, pleaded guilty in August to releasing the widely publicized Internet virus. "Parson's worm was not an aberrant moment in a young person's life, but instead was just the latest in a string of escalating efforts by Parson to take over other people's computers, destroy their web sites, and otherwise use his computer skills for his own selfish amusement, personal gain and/or to harm others," U.S. Attorney John McKay and assistant U.S. attorney Annette L. Hayes wrote in their sentencing memorandum. The prosecutors then requested that Judge Marsha J. Pechman sentence Parson to 37 months in prison -- the maximum he could be sentenced under a plea agreement that suggested a sentence between 1½ years and three years and one month. But Parson's attorneys had hoped for a much lighter sentence -- six months in prison with three years supervised probation, according to a notification sent to the U.S. Probation and U.S. Attorney's offices six days ago. The defense attorneys also wrote that Parsons should spend an additional six months in a community treatment center and another six months in home detention. Prosecutors said that if the judge follows the sentencing recommendation of Parson's attorneys, the plea agreement will be withdrawn and Parsons must stand trial. Parson's worm was a variant of the original Blaster worm that victimized millions of computer users, whether in homes or on corporate networks, the prosecutors wrote in their recommendation to the court. The original Blaster virus cost computer users their e-mail access while shutting down government agencies, large banks and transportation systems. The original Blaster worm also had a large impact on Microsoft Corporation. The virus directed the infected computers to launch a denial-of-service attack against domain names through which Microsoft distributes security information to its customers. Parson "had a key role in causing all this damage" because he released a variant of the original Blaster worm "knowing what the worm was capable of doing, and intending to damage individual computer users and Microsoft," the prosecutors wrote. Parson's worm was responsible for about $1.22 million in damage, according to the prosecutors' estimates. Parson's virus included a program that, when loaded on a targeted computed, allowed other computers access to private files, the prosecutors wrote. The 6-foot-4-inch, 320-pound Parson, known online as "teekid," was the first person arrested in connection with the Blaster attacks. Upon his arrest in August 2003, experts said there was no reason to believe Parsons knew Blaster's original author. Parson is being sentenced in Seattle, where the Blaster investigation began. *==============================================================* "Communications without intelligence is noise; Intelligence without communications is irrelevant." Gen Alfred. M. Gray, USMC ================================================================ C4I.org - Computer Security, & Intelligence - http://www.c4i.org *==============================================================* _________________________________________ Open Source Vulnerability Database (OSVDB) Everything is Vulnerable - http://www.osvdb.org/
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