FBI provided Anonymous with targets, new leaks show
by alethoRT | June 05, 2014
Leaked
documents pertaining to the case against an American computer hacker
currently serving a 10-year prison sentence have exposed discrepancies
concerning the government's prosecution and raise further questions
about the role of a federal informant.
The
documents — evidence currently under seal by order of a United States
District Court judge and not made public until now — shines light on
several aspects of the case against Jeremy Hammond, a 29-year-old
hacktivist from Chicago, Illinois who was arrested in March 2012 with
the help of an online acquaintance-turned-government informant. Last
May, Hammond entered a plea deal
in which he acknowledged his role in a number of cyberattacks waged by
the hacktivist group Anonymous and various offshoots; had his case gone
to trial, Hammond would have faced a maximum of life behind bars if found guilty by jury.
Articles published in tandem by The Daily Dot and Motherboard on Thursday this week
pull back the curtain on the government's investigation into Hammond
and reveal the role that Hector Monsegur, a hacker who agreed to
cooperate with authorities in exchange for leniency with regards to his
own criminal matters, played in directing others towards vulnerable
targets and orchestrating cyberattacks against the websites of foreign
governments, all while under the constant watch of the US government.
Two-and-a-half
years before Hammond pleaded guilty, Monsegur did the same upon being
nailed with hacking charges himself. In lieu of risking a hefty
sentence, however, Monsegur immediately agreed to aid the authorities
and serve as an informant for the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
eventually helping law enforcement nab Hammond and others. Last week,
Monsegur was finally sentenced
for the crimes he pleaded guilty to back in 2012 and was spared further
jail time by the same judge who in November sent Hammond away for a decade.
Hector Xavier Monsegur
According
to this week's revelations, Monsegur did more than just inform for the
FBI after his arrest. The articles suggest rather that from behind his
internet handle “Sabu,” Monsegur solicited vulnerabilities and targets
from a wide range of hackers and then handed them off to other online
acquaintances, including Hammond, in order to pilfer, plunder and
otherwise ravage the websites and networks of foreign entities and at
least one major American corporation.
Combined,
the articles and the evidence contained therein corroborate very
serious allegations concerning the Justice Department's conduct in the
case against Hammond and numerous other hacktivists, while raising
numerous questions surrounding the FBI's knowledge in hundreds of
cyberattacks and its documented efforts to coordinate those campaigns
using their informant.
Excerpts from previously unpublished chat logs and other evidence used in the Hammond case and obtained by the Dot and Motherboard are cited to provide a new point-of-view concerning two matters in particular: the December 2011 hacking of Strategic Forecasting, or Stratfor; and a January 2012 campaign led by Anonymous against government websites in Brazil and the US.
Contrary to the government's claims, the Dot
article alleges that Hammond did not mastermind the hack against
Stratfor, but was rather told to target the Texas-based intelligence
firm after Monsegur was made aware of a vulnerability in its network by a
mysterious hacker who used the handle “Hyrriiya.” Weeks’ worth of
private chats and group messages logged by Monsegur for the FBI after
his arrest confirm that Hyrriiya breached Stratfor first, then
sent details to the hacker he knew as “Sabu,” who in turn personally
recruited Hammond to take the attack to the next level. For the first
time, a clear timeline now exists to show exactly how the hack was
hatched first by Hyrriiya, then Monsegur. A claim made ahead of
Hammond's sentencing hearing in which he claimed to have never even
heard of Stratfor until he was fed the target by Sabu is authenticated
with the logs.
Motherboard's report focuses on a span of time only weeks after the Stratfor
hack earned Anonymous headlines around the globe. Monsegur at that time
was maintaining a list of targets in Brazil that would then be
dispersed among members of Anonymous and other hackers to be defaced en
masse as part of at least two concurrent cyber operations carried out in
early 2012: an anti-corruption campaign against the Brazilian
government; and another op in response to the shutdown of file-sharing
site Megaupload.
"Sabu
would say he wanted so-and-so, that another hacking team wanted this
particular target," Hammond told Motherboard from prison last month.
"Some Brazilian was looking for people to hack them once I gave him the
keys."
Previously,
Hammond said that Monsegur directed Anonymous to target websites
belonging to no fewer than eight foreign governments while he was fully
cooperating with the FBI. Only now, however, has documentation surfaced
to verify that claim and others about alleged acts of cyberwar carried
out by the the government by proxy.
"It's
completely outrageous that they made Sabu into this informant and then,
it appears, requested him to then get other hackers to invade sites and
look for vulnerabilities in those sites," Michael Ratner, an attorney
for WikILeaks, told Motherboard. "What that tells you is that this
federal government is really — it's really the major cybercriminal out
there."
The articles were first published Thursday morning and were a joint effort by journalists Dell Cameron of the Dot, Daniel Stuckey of Motherboard and RT's Andrew Blake.

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