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‘I Was a Weird Kid’: Jailhouse Confessions of a Teen Hacker

Posted on September 19, 2025 by Dissent

Margi Murphy reports:

Between the money bag and clown emojis, the lmfaos and the loooools, a pixelated thumbnail of a teenager covered in blood appeared in a Telegram group chat on a September afternoon in 2022. Noah Urban, then an 18-year-old living in Palm Coast, Florida, clicked play.

He watched as the kid in the video begged him to transfer $200,000 to his captors, who were holding guns to his head. “Elijah, for real bro, you know we used to work together in the past,” the boy said, addressing Noah by one of his aliases. His face was swollen, his mouth full of blood trickling onto a white Hollister sweatshirt. “You know I’ve got your back. Just let me know. I’ll do whatever you want.”

Noah instantly recognized the kid. Justin had worked for him, helping steal cryptocurrency. He didn’t know Justin’s full name, but he knew not to cave in to ransom demands. Besides, he thought, the video could be fake. He didn’t send any money.

A clip like that would unnerve most teenagers, but by 2022, Noah had seen a lot. At the time he was on the run from the FBI as a member of a cybergang that would become known as Scattered Spider.

Read more at Bloomberg.


Related:

  • Noah Urban aka "King Bob" of Scattered Spider, sentenced to 10 years in prison, $13 million restitution
  • Florida man known as "King Bob" pleads guilty to charges related to cryptocurrency theft
  • Fla. Man Charged in SIM-Swapping Spree is Key Suspect in Hacker Groups Oktapus, Scattered Spider
Category: Commentaries and AnalysesMiscellaneousU.S.

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