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(Follow-up) Hacker Sentenced In Virginia to 10 Years In Prison For Stealing 675,000 Credit Card Numbers Leading To $36 Million In Losses

Posted on July 22, 2011 by Dissent

 Rogelio Hackett Jr., 25, of Lithonia, Ga., was sentenced today to 120 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Anthony J. Trenga in Alexandria, Va., for trafficking in counterfeit credit cards and aggravated identity theft, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride for the Eastern District of Virginia.

Read more on Dark Reading.

Previous coverage of this case on DataBreaches.net here and here.  We still don’t know who “Company One” was, do we?


Related:

  • US company with access to biggest telecom firms uncovers breach by nation-state hackers
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  • UK: FCA fines former employee of Virgin Media O2 for data protection breach
  • The 4TB time bomb: when EY's cloud went public (and what it taught us)
  • Another plastic surgery practice fell prey to a cyberattack that acquired patient photos and info
  • How a hacking gang held Italy’s political elites to ransom
Category: Breach IncidentsBusiness SectorHackU.S.

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← Ca: No investigation of Regina doctor by College of Physicians and Surgeons yet
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