[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[infowar.de] the "biggest military computer hack of all time"
http://news.com.com/2008-7350_3-5786782.html
Gary McKinnon: Scapegoat or public enemy?
By Colin Barker
Story last modified Wed Jul 13 11:47:00 PDT 2005
An unemployed North Londoner has been accused of committing the "biggest 
military computer hack of all time" by the U.S. government while 
authorities in Britain chose to release him without charge.
Gary McKinnon has a lot to worry about. His job prospects are bleak. He 
will shortly have to leave his home in North London and could be facing up 
to 70 years in a U.S. federal prison--a prospect that terrifies him.
His actions have been well-recorded. Over a period of years he managed to 
bypass the security of what should be the most sophisticated IT systems on 
the planet, many of which belong to the U.S. Department of Defense and NASA.
There (was) a definite illicit thrill that didn't last very long.
That was back in 2002. McKinnon has already been investigated thoroughly 
by the legal authorities in the United Kingdom and released without 
charge. But what some see as the slow-working cogs of the U.S. legal 
system are clicking into action now--leaving him hanging in limbo as he 
awaits a hearing later this month that will determine whether he's to be 
extradited. He's accused of hacking and causing damage to federal defense 
systems. Paul McNulty, the U.S. attorney for the eastern district of 
Virginia, said in 2002 that "Mr. McKinnon is charged with the biggest 
military computer hack of all time," according to several publications, 
including CNN.
The unemployed UFO enthusiast was, metaphorically speaking, able to walk 
right in, look around and make himself at home in what are supposedly some 
of the most secure systems in the world. Although breaking into the 
Department of Defense required a combination of ingenuity and hours of 
mindless drudgery, ultimately, McKinnon says, it was the "dangerously lax 
IT systems" that made it possible, he claims. And as for the "minor" 
damage to the systems concerned, it was not deliberate, he said, but 
happened accidentally while he was trying to cover his tracks.
McKinnon, now 39, admits that there was a period of his life when he was 
"addicted" to computers. It threatened his life, his health and his 
relationships at the time, but he couldn't leave them alone.
His interest in IT was sparked, as it was for many others, by an interest 
in science, science fiction and the unknown. It was the search for proof 
of extraterrestrial life and suspicions about federal policies and actions 
in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001, that led him to the restricted government 
sites in the first place.
McKinnon's story, some say, raises critical issues about the rights of 
British citizens accused of committing crimes in the United States, the 
state of IT security internationally, and the possible existence of 
antigravity technology in a U.S. military establishment.
Q: Why do you think the U.S. authorities behaved the way they did, with an 
extradition order?
McKinnon: Well, the reason they give is that I, on my own, closed down the 
entire metro district of Washington for a few days, including a weapons 
station, which I dispute.
My thing was being quiet and not being seen and getting the information 
out. And also, when I was there, you do a NetStat routine and you see all 
the other connections to that machine, and there is a permanent weakness 
for foreign hackers because their security is not even lax, it is 
nonexistent. You wouldn't believe it.
They might claim that by installing a remote control program, I opened 
them (the systems) up, but the access was already there. I didn't even 
have to crack passwords.
What about the damage you are said to have caused?
McKinnon: What they call damage is really just them realizing that they 
have been accessed without authorization. Then they say things like I 
deleted 300 users, deleted systems files and such. That was one instance 
when I did a batch file to clean up all my stuff--I think once and only 
once, though perhaps I ran it on the root drive of the "c:" drive. But it 
certainly wasn't every machine I was on and, if you believe them, they 
talk about 94 networks being damaged.
It is very worrying that it is the world's only superpower, and it is that 
easy to breach security.
Surely all the data was backed up anyway?
McKinnon: Well, it should be, and it should be behind a firewall, and the 
local administrator should not have a blank password. Take one defense 
computer, where they use image-based installation techniques where most of 
the machines have the same BIOS, the same hard drive, the same hardware 
specification, and you just whack it out across the systems. Unfortunately 
for them, the local system administrator's password was blank. So you 
don't even need to become the domain administrator. That's 5,000 machines 
all with a blank system level administrator password. To be fair to them, 
as I got deeper into it, they closed me down pretty quickly.
Did it worry you, this lack of protection for systems?
McKinnon: I was always very frightened when I realized there were always 
other people from all over the world on there. These were like foreign 
ISPs, routinely going through things. It is very worrying that it is the 
world's only superpower, and it is that easy to breach security.
What were you doing prior to the most recent arrest?
McKinnon: I wanted to get the trailing documentation to screw the 
Americans. I looked at things and I didn't like what I was seeing. They 
talk about the war on terror, and meanwhile they are training people in 
torture techniques, breaking and entering, and close-quarter fighting, and 
these are all little South American dictatorships. And then there is the 
humanist angle of antigravity technology and the 9/11 thing, but that 
didn't get very far.
Was your main motivation the search for extraterrestrials?
McKinnon: That is how it started off, and it then grew into suspicions 
about 9/11, because there are hundreds of unanswered questions about 9/11: 
the dragging away of all the forensics evidence, and the sale of all the 
concrete and steel to China. Even the firemen of New York organized their 
own Web site to complain that this isn't a proper process. Then there are 
the schools for terrorists run by America to help Latin-American 
dictatorships and stuff.
The issues around the UFO thing, as I discovered more and learned more, 
became much more serious.
So when you were searching for extraterrestrial life, how did you feel 
about it? Was it just fun?
McKinnon: It was mainly very, very boring. You had to trawl through so 
much, and bear in mind that it wasn't publicly accessible Web sites, it 
was all private military Web sites. So it was about logistics, support 
and, basically, as soon as I controlled a network, I ran a file-searching 
program looking for keywords in files. So it was exciting every time you 
did turn up something, which only happened a few times. That was very 
exciting. I called it research, but it is a bit of a misnomer really.
Was the fun part just in being where you are not supposed to be?
McKinnon: Yes. There (was) a definite illicit thrill that didn't last very 
long. The issues around the UFO thing, as I discovered more and learned 
more, became much more serious. Eventually it became all about the issue 
of suppressed technology. I know for a fact that they have antigravity. 
And the basic quantum-physical mechanics of having antigravity imply a 
free source of energy, getting energy direct from the vacuum. Now to me, 
that would stop all the wars over oil. It would help fight famine and 
(help) with irrigation. It would be free energy, and that is a huge thing.
So the U.S. has have developed an antigravity device?
McKinnon: Yes. Recently, I think two years ago, Boeing Aerospace announced 
that they were putting $50 million into investigating antigravity 
research. For me, the timing was interesting because I think it is 
something they already have, but it's not general knowledge, and if they 
were caught they would probably say that it was renegade factions high up 
in NASA, high up in the military and high up in commerce.
How do you come across these things? Is information on antigravity devices 
freely available?
McKinnon: Some of it is, but it is a combination of what is freely 
available and what isn't. Take the Disclosure Project, which is a 
Washington lobbyist group run by Steven Greer, a military doctor, and he 
had 300 testimonials in his book from people, ranging from civilian air 
traffic controllers to ex-commanders-in-chief of NATO, all saying, "Yes, 
UFOs exist; yes, certain parts of the military know about this, and have 
this and are using the technology and implementing a trickle-down thing so 
that eventually the technology will be everywhere."
How does the possibility of being extradited to the U.S. make you feel?
McKinnon: Better than I was the first time around (in 2002), although it 
is very similar. I had lots of work lined up which was 
Internet-related--computer games testing--and I have lost that because of 
my bail conditions. My landlord wants me out, because of all the press and 
police attention we had, so it is a bit of a rerun of 2002. Lost the flat, 
lost the work, but I managed to keep the girlfriend this time.
For a few days it was very dark, but I am feeling quite up now because we 
have been talking to Boris Johnson (a conservative member of Parliament), 
who is leading a Parliamentary Early Day Motion against the 2003 
Extradition Act along with the Enron Three--or the NatWest Three, as they 
like to be called now (three British bankers who are also facing 
extradition to the U.S. on charges related to the Enron financial 
scandal). So together we are trying to get a judicial review going and 
change the law.
So what is the official position?
McKinnon: I asked my solicitor why the CPS had taken (my) case away from 
the U.K. police and handed it to the U.S. She was speaking to someone who 
was fairly high up, and he said that it had gone way above his head. 
Reading between the lines, that means the Home Office.
Scapegoat or public enemy?
Is that a good thing?
McKinnon: No. It almost sounds like a done deal to me. The fact that I am 
not alone is encouraging. We are getting nearly 70 MPs (members of 
Parliament) signed up to the early day motion.
Have you had much response, or help, from the hacker community?
McKinnon: I never really mixed with the hacker community, if you can call 
them that. In fact, after all of this happened back in 2002, some of them 
contacted me, but they are not really hackers. In fact they are all 
professionals, but they used to hack, and they are very good and they are 
a knowledgeable lot. Some know about the law, some know forensic 
computing, and there has been a good bit of support there. In fact, the 
Free Gary Web site came from one of those people.
A Web site you are not allowed to use, of course, because of your bail 
conditions?
Right, I have to collect printouts of my e-mails and stuff, which is 
silly, as I have been free to use the Internet for three years, although I 
haven't actually had my own Internet account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: infowar -
de-unsubscribe -!
- infopeace -
de
For additional commands, e-mail: infowar -
de-help -!
- infopeace -
de