Todd Wallack reports that Stephen Watt, the former Morgan Stanley coder who provided Albert Gonzalez with a sniffer program used to steal data from TJX customers, may appeal his sentence: Stephen Watt was sentenced Dec. 28 by a federal judge in Boston to two years in prison and three years of supervised release and ordered…
Search Results for: sentenced
Major International Hacker Pleads Guilty For Massive Attack On U.s. Retail And Banking Networks
Albert Gonzalez, 28, of Miami, pleaded guilty today to conspiring to hack into computer networks supporting major American retail and financial organizations, and to steal data relating to tens of millions of credit and debit cards, announced Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division Lanny A. Breuer, U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey…
Inmate gets 18 months for hacking prison computer
In a follow-up to a case reported in September, Robert McMillan reports: A former Massachusetts prison inmate has been given an 18-month prison sentence for hacking prison computers while he was incarcerated. Francis “Frank” Janosko, 44, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court in Boston for abusing a computer provided by the Plymouth County Correctional Facility….
Former Morgan Stanley Coder Gets 2 Years in Prison for TJX Hack
Kim Zetter reports that TJX hacker and Albert Gonzalez accomplice Stephen Watt was sentenced today to two years for his role in what the feds are calling “the largest identity theft in our Nation’s history.” Read more on Threat Level.
AZ: Ex-Valley restaurateur convicted in identity fraud scheme
Nicole Ethier reports that a former Valley restaurateur, Reha Soylular, recently was convicted in an identity fraud scheme: According to court documents, between 2002 and 2004 Soylular gained more than $1,000 by using other individuals’ personal information, including names and Social Security information, to establish merchant teller accounts without permission in Orange County, Calif. Soylular…
Court Rejects Request to Consolidate TJX Hacker Cases
Kim Zetter of Threat Level reports that: A federal judge in Massachusetts has rejected a request from U.S. attorneys to consolidate a New Jersey case against Albert Gonzalez, who has admitted hacking more than 120 million credit card numbers from Heartland Payment Systems, with two other cases against him in Massachusetts. […] The case was…