Feds Admit Error In McDanel Security Case 211
prostoalex writes "US federal prosecutors have admitted that an error was made in prosecuting Bret McDanel under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. McDanel discovered a security vulnerability on his former employer's server, and seeing that little efforts were put into repairing it, sent out e-mails to the customers of Tornado Development Inc. After the prosecution revised the court materials, they admitted there was no proof that McDanel intended to impair the system's integrity."
OK people (Score:1, Troll)
tee hee... (Score:1)
Re:tee hee... (Score:1)
Re:OK people (Score:2)
Are we going to be grown-ups about this, or are there going to be a million immature posts...
You're new here aren't you?Re:OK people (Score:1)
I am new here, you insensitive clod. (Look at the extremely high user ID)
Also, most hackers like this should be freed. He was trying to do the right thing, even if it meant exposing a weakness and inviting the black hats. Crackers on the other hand, who exploit weaknesses for their own gain should still be prosecuted and punished.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:OK people (Score:1, Informative)
As a lawyer, I can tell you that civil suits require damages of some kind. Mr. McDanel caused no damages of any kind to the servers. He did not take down any machines. He did not post exploits to the Internet. Simply put, he is a perfectly harmless individual.
Frankly, I believe that the justice system fears individuals with computer knowledge. The judges presiding today are the same ignoramuses who have been on the bench since the 1970s. Now, I've been using computers since the 1980s (that's right,
Re:OK people (Score:2)
IAAS (I am a skeptic).
The parent poster claims he is a lawyer.
His website is listed as http://sethf.com/
On that website, he apologigizes for his HTML with "Quick navigation (I'm a server programmer, not a web-designer
On that same page, he describes himself as "Seth Finkelstein - Anti-censorship activist and programmer Seth Finkelstein "
On that same page, he makes reference to, and links to, a whitepaper he co-wrote. The wh
Re:Troll:Seth Fink!LE!stein not Seth Fink!EL!stein (Score:2)
The real Seth never pretends to be a lawyer.
Thanks. I did miss that.
Still, I think we can assume the original poster isn't a lawyer either.
Re:OK people (Score:1)
Re:OK people (Score:2)
oh...wait...
Re:OK people (Score:2)
Hey! In this house, sonny, you pay for all the Kevin you get!
Cold comfort (Score:5, Insightful)
But this is a country which has hundreds of people locked up, with currently no prospect of seeing their day in court, or even a lawyer.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:1)
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Do you think maybe it should be each of the members of the jury instead?
Re:Cold comfort (Score:1)
The judge can set aside a verdict which is an obvious misinterpretation of the law by the jury.
In the simplest of terms, he was found guilty of damages to their business.
The damage, however, was not so much to their systems, as the law he was conviced of states is punishable, but to their reputation, as their lawyers argued.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cold comfort (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, it could be tremendous opportunity. Let's examine the possible outcomes. Disclaimer: IANAL.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:1)
You spent 16 months away from your family, friends, home, job (if you were lucky enough to have one after the tech bust), all the things that define you as you, and then tell me what a "tremendous opportunity" it was.
No need to explain the 1 and a half year gap in your resume, all the PHBs will see you as one of "those" people.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Right... let's see if you still feel the same way when the feds admit they fucked up one day after having [a family member|close friend|you] executed for a murder you didn't commit. OK, yah, I'm being sensationalistic here, but the point is the same. Do you really think he feels better after 16 months in the federal pokey to hear the feds
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
> way when the feds admit they fucked up one day
> after having [a family member|close friend|you]
> executed for a murder you didn't commit.
I think that I would most certainly not feel the same way if I was executed.
--
-JC
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
convicted of a felony?" That's a real multipler for success when seeking jobs in the future.
Unless you are trying to get a job with the Russian Mafia.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
What we really need (Score:2)
What about the opportunity for payback for overzealous prosecutors?
Sometimes after reading about cases like this, I wonder if there shouldn't be a law which says that if prosecutors over reach -- and especially if there's
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2, Funny)
I can tell your' glass is always half empty. Locked up, no day in court, no charges, no rights or even fair representation. But do you mention, no bill for staying on a luxurious tropical island paradise?
Better than 3 years (Score:2)
When talking about a computer is punishable by more years in prison than manslaughter, the system is wrong by any damn standards.
Can he sue for wrongful prosecution?
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Re:Cold comfort (Score:5, Insightful)
The only thing about all of those linked stories is... they aren't American citizens being held in Guantanamo. However you feel about their detention in Cuba (of all places!), it really has no relevance to the post about due process. Non-American citizens have no inherant rights to a speedy (or any) trial in America.
Actually they do, but currently the government is bending the law. Firstly, this country was founded on the principle that all men are equal and endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights. People in other countries do not have a different creator.
Historically, non-citizens in this country have enjoyed, in addition to rights granted by international law, many of the rights granted to US citizens. There have been cases where international law has been bent before, such as the refusal of states to notify the consulate of the country of origin of aliens sentenced to die as required by international law and as requested by the federal government, but there have never been abuses on the current scale.
In addition, the "combatants" at guantanimo bay have not been clasified under any legal term because no matter how they were classified their current treatment violates their rights under US and international laws. If they are criminals they get a trial; if they are prisoners of war they get freed at the end of the war, etc.
Also, there are people at Guantanimo bay who are technically citizens of the United States or a western democracy such as the UK or Australia. They are not getting the treatment usually afforded such citizens.
On top of all of this, when our citizens get into trouble abroad there are often treaties in place which guarantee their rights, and outcry when those rights ae violated. Likewise when people from other countries get into trouble here. Such outcry often ends in some kind of compromise and these treaties are supposed to be enforced. They are not being enforced here and neither is there any compromise.
Then there are the people who were rounded up and detained within the US. Most were non-citizens, but some were citizens. In these cases none of the normal due-process was followed (access to a lawyer, specific charges, etc etc) and neither have many of these people been released. As far as anyone can tell, there have been people imprisoned with no access to lawyers, no charges, no evidence, and no trial for over 2 years now. Numbers have ranged from hundreds to thousands because the administration is not admitting a lot and hoping people will just forget about the whole thing.
The whole process is unamerican, antidemocratic, and is the doctrine of our very enemies; it needs to be stopped.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
It frightens me how so many people don't recognize the serious infringments on constitutional rights our government is performing in the name of "security" makes us all less secure.
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
It's important that we *not* treat terrorists, spies, and other illegal combatants the same as we treat legal combatants. If we treated them the
Well our fore fathers fall into that category (Score:2)
I think what the Government is doing on so many fronts is playing loose and free with the law for their own ends. This is very dangerous, very dangerous to us and our fre
Re:Well our fore fathers fall into that category (Score:2)
Wow, do you have a skewed understanding of history (that, or what exactly comprises "illegal combatants"). Pretty much all of the colonial militias not only
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2, Insightful)
They should if we're the ones detaining them, and we truly believe our laws are just. Deport them or charge them, but holding them indefinitely is wrong.
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. "
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
How are we detaining them? Did they get hauled off to jail after traffic stops? Did riot cops grab them for chanting "death to America" in some downtown? I cannot understand why so many people think our civilian judicial system in any way applies here.
The people held in Cuba are not US citizens. They were captured in battle against our forces and the
U.S. Constitution says "person" not "citizen" (Score:2)
I would just like to call your attention to the fact that nowhere in the Constitution does it say that the rights afforded by it only extend to citizens. Freedom from unreasonable search and seizure and the right to due process are granted to every person, not citizen. I don't know why people think otherwise, but it simply isn't true.
"Amendment V: [emphasis mine, as if you couldn't guess]
No person shall be held to an
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Universal declaration of Human Rights:
[...]
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.
Everyone is entitled in full equality t
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
In what way is being captured on a battlefield considered arbitrary arrest, detention or exile? Would you rather that the US Army refuse to take prisoners?
Re:Cold comfort (Score:2)
Recent joke in rec.humor.funny (rephrased):
Discussion of the Iraq war in heaven:
Alexander the Great: "If I only had some of those C130 supply planes, I certainly would have conquered India!"
Frederik the Great: "Wow, with some of those M1A tanks I would have won the 7 years war in
Re:Cold comfort (Score:1)
do something that makes the suits look bad... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:do something that makes the suits look bad... (Score:1)
After sixteen months!? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Not according to Ashcroft.
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Not according to Ashcroft.
Note to mods: despite appearences, the parent post should not be modded "+1 Funny"; it shoudl be modded "+1 Insightful".
Well... (Score:1)
Next, they should pay him a lump sum for all of the money he would probably have earned if he hadn't been prosecuted and imprisoned.
Next, they should refund him lawyer fees.
Unfortunately, I've never heard of the federal government having to pay punitive damages. I'm not even sure they've ever had to compensate the wrongly imprisoned.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Clears up a lot of loose ends.
In fact, there is a jurisdiction somewhere in the US that is fighting the family of an executed prisoner over evidence the family claims will exonerate him.
If there were more proof of falsely executed prisoners reaching the media, the whole house of cards would come crashing down around supporters of the death penalty.
With the exception of the USSC Chief Justice. Reinquist
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:1, Redundant)
Rus
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
Re:After sixteen months!? (Score:2)
I call this a massive failure of government, and one which is a direct result of an overly complex, ambiguous, highly exploitable system of law, i.e. big government.
Well I'm glad (Score:4, Interesting)
I think he did the right thing. The only people to lose out appear to be the incompetents who are now forced to fix their mistake.
Re:Well I'm glad (Score:1)
The "Customers" should be happy that they were warned of the security hole.
"no proof that McDanel intended to impair the system's integrity" How would you impair a system by sending out emails? Wait a minute shouldn't spammers be guilty of the same? and they have to wait 16 months to find this while he was "pounded in the arse". Just great.
Re:Well I'm glad (Score:1)
Re:Well I'm glad (Score:2)
This is like Microsoft ignoring security holes - and we've all heard those stories.
Yeah, except Microsoft wouldn't have you tried as a criminal and incarcerated .... Oh wait.
Precedence and the future? (Score:2)
Jonah Hex
Reversal (Score:2)
Been there done that (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem with prosecutors is, they're quick to jump on a case and will do all sorts of stuff to get a conviction. I know because I've dealt with them and have been incarcerated for computer intrusion and electronics eavesdropping. While at trial, federal agents purjured themselves on the stand and got warnings. A federal agent stated "Mr. XXX is wanted for breaking into NSA, FBI, CAI, and Military machines... But he is not being charged with that right now" ... Another so called FBI computer expert stated he didn't understand what an IP address was (no bullshitting as my case and the transcripts are
public record). My ISP, my phone company testified I hadn't used the phone, nor was I online at the time it happened. Now if that is not cause for
reasonable doubt I'll go on...
Upon my arrest the agents stated they had been to my previous address of which I hadn't lived at for YEARS. So you mean to tell me, that if you think I attacked some machine, where did you get my information from. If it were via IP they would have come straight to my address via my ISP's logs. Now they had firewall logs with none of my information whatsoever, and they had a sniffer log which recorded the entire breakin. On the sniffer log, nothing shows up remotely all you see are mail connections, then an attack coming from the same host the sniffer log was on.
Local attack then right? Try explaining that to a jury of 40-50 year old comp-phobic people who's favorite tv show is Judge Judy.
I was the first case in the Southern District to go to trial, and was told if I take it to trial I would face 10 years. I was offered 1year, then 6 months, then a 6 month split 3 in jail 3 under house arrest. I still fought it. Feds took this as something arrogant, I fought for my rights. Now given I was no angel growing up (sold drugs, stole cars you name early 90'ish) I swallowed it as karma. Appeal? Sure to go through the same thing? Wasn't worth it for me, the impact of the trial is enough to drain you, financial, mentally (if your weak).
First thing the feds thing coming into my house... High five each other... "Yes we got sil from AntiOffline..." what a scam.
Its nice to know however the DA was quickly promoted and a whole new cybersecurity *cough political bullshit* department was thrown up in NYC
So after this post... Let's see how long it will be before my PO calls up and automagically violates me for some bullshit. Meaning I spoke in a manner the feds didn't like. Fuck a fed
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
Re:Been there done that (Score:1)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/20547.h
Re:Been there done that (Score:1)
You have heard of paper, haven't you?
Re:Been there done that (Score:2, Insightful)
You have heard of paper, haven't you?
A link doesn't have to be online. It could be a reference number, a place/date/whatever, or something of this kind.
Apparently you know little of law (Score:2)
My response to an article about the case [antioffline.com]. Again, I've spent so many sleepless days and nights over it, I don't even bother answering anyone's questions, being that the bottom line is I was convicted.
Re:Apparently you know little of law (Score:2)
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
This is a FELONY. If it is really a matter of the written record, as it would be if it were conducted in COURT, **PRESS CHARGES**.
C//
Re:Been there done that (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
*shrug*
Sue. And *MAKE* the them.
C//
dilemna (Score:2)
An entire document has been written and distributed abour my case throughout federal offices with my name changed, and I laughed when my friend (who happens to be let's say be in the know) showed it to me. Purpose of my case from my perspective? Politics [usdoj.gov]. It's all about money nothing more and when federal agencies need more funding come crunch time what do they do?
Re:dilemna (Score:2)
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
Don't go around jiggling door handles, and the cops won't bust you for breaking and entering.
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
I believe you. I have certainly come across officers who routinely lie in court. Some law men feel themselves above the law but see someone who they feel that it is "their turn to go down". The victim concerned has probably committed a number of minor offences but this time are guilty of nothing more than being a PITA to law officers.
So law officers perjure themselves, knowing that even if their falsehoods are discovered they are written off as nothing more than exce
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
I'm sorry, I have trouble feeling any sympathy for someone who was unjustly prosecuted and chose to roll over and die rather than fight for what's right. Injustice took place, and it could happen again, because YOU let it happen.
Not that I would take your account of the events at face value, either. If the facts were as one-sided as you present them, it would have taken a conspiracy between the federal agents, prosecutors, judges, jurors, and your own defense attorney to result in prison time.
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
Shows how much you know. Some people don't have the funds to fight the system (which he mentioned). Some people have families to think about. "Mommy, where's Daddy, and why do we live in a shelter?" "Daddy's in jail, honey. He tried to fight the Man and we went broke doing it
What a hellish thing to go thru ! (Score:2)
I read what you have written, and I understand them all, because I had a similar experience.
I was lucky, that the public prosecutor was a dork, and because I know people in really high places.
All I did was nothing - in a discussion, I laid out a _hypothetical-case-of-a-possibility-electronic-br e aking_ and then someone snitched on me.
All hell broke loose, and I had to face what you had gone thru, - sans the sentencing thingy, - but all in all, looking back, I spent more than 500K in attorney's fee alon
Re:Been there done that (Score:2)
Wrong use of the laws (Score:2, Insightful)
Equal Punishment (Score:1)
Re:Wrong use of the laws (Score:2)
Congress needs to stop trusting prosecutors, and spell everything out if they really have the intentions they claim.
Or, tin-foil hat mode, they actually mean to do business thi
not trade secrets? (Score:1, Insightful)
What I want to know is if I expose a weakness in someone else's code, how is it that I'm the one 'impairing the functioning' of the code? I didn't put the security flaw in there. However, I can see a bit of an argument that you are communicating trade secrets, why i
Win the battle, lose the war (Score:4, Insightful)
We do have freedoms to cherish... (Score:1)
Re:Win the battle, lose the war (Score:2)
Tell that to the guy who spent 16 months in prison waiting for someone to figure out their mistake. Then think about how *you'd* feel if you were that guy and some idiot told you to just get over it 'cause mistakes happen. Then think about how something like this rarely seems to happen to people who have the millions of dollars it takes to make the U.S. justice system work for them.
A lot of people read
Re:Win the battle, lose the war (Score:2)
I think we all understand that no human construct is infallible.
However, it is fairly clear that the system's not even functioning as well as it should (and must). There are several causes.
There is a lack of real checks and balances against prosecutors. They may be checked by judjes and jurors, but other than loosing a trial (that they would have lost or never had in the first place otherwise) there is little to penalize overzealous behaviour.
It's gotten to the point where when I do watch the news, i
For those that didn't RTFA (Score:2, Insightful)
"During his trial, prosecutors argued McDanel intentionally caused damage to Tornado's computer server by overloading it with too many messages and impaired the system's security by exposing its vulnerability to the public. A judge found him guilty of unauthorized access and sentenced him to 16 months in federal prison."
It's sad that there is not better review of cases in this country. Federal prosecuters should be held to the hig
Lessig's comments (Score:2)
DZM
A repeated pattern (Score:2)
When it comes to computers, the people making laws and doling out punishment haven't the slightest clue what they're doing.
This is seen over and over, such as DMCA, proabbly parts of the Patriot act, this case, SCO, and I'm sure that there's thousands others.
Politicals (and lawyers) tend to be PHBs when it comes to computers. They know the buzzwords, as well as "Computer == Windows == Microsoft".
Deja Vu (Score:2)
1) Should/Will this man be compensated for his time in the pokey. How do you repay a man 16 months in prison? Granted I would have loved to have seen something on the books (e.g. precedent) to stick some real spammers in jail. Good thing this guy had a great attorney.
2) He had an excellent attorney. For those of you who don't know Jennifer Grannick [granick.com] she is one of the most knowledgable l
Re:Deja Vu (Score:2)
Too bad her clients seem to end up in the pokey a lot!
How about criticism of the original Judge? (Score:2)
The real problem is with the judge.
Is it cold in here? (Score:2)
A Mistake, a Ruined Life (Score:2)
That's all well and good, but how is this going to help this guy get his life back?
Are they going to renumerate his legal fees?
His lost wages?
His lost reputation?
Undoubtedly no.
The guy is ruined from a financial standpoint, unless of course he was a rich man to begin with. He enters an incredibly tight job market in the IT industry with a raltively ruined resume thanks to overzealous prosecution,
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Could Tornado execs be brought up on charges of Obstruction of justice? Lying to and/or misleading the FBI during the course of an investigation could be seen as doing just that.
LK
Re:I hope he sues the bejeezus out of the governme (Score:2)
Even if he's an asshole ... (Score:2)
What you are trying to do is to make TWO WRONGS A RIGHT.
Two Wrongs Can Never Become One Right.
Even if the guy is the world's foremost Asshole Cum Laude, he shouldn't be put through this type of shits.
What the gummint had done was wrong, and those public prosecutors (persecutors !!) should have their nuts cut out and fried for what they have done.
We don't, and SHOULD NEVER condone any abuse of the law, and what the gummint has done in this case, and in many other cases in the USA, are outright wholesale
What has happened to LIBERTY in the USA ? (Score:2)
Looks like the United States of America has lost its shine.
Anyone in the US of A can be officially harrassed by the government (prosecutors are from the gummint, right?) and then after so much harrassment, the harrassers said that they had no case.
So what about the victim ?
What about the ordeal the victim (or victims) had to go through ?
All the time lost, all the sufferings, all the agonies, and the ruined reputation, what about all these ??
In the USA, many people think that money can buy everything.