Russia and The US Fight Over Who Gets To Extradite A Hacker (cnn.com) 98
An anonymous reader quotes CNN:
A young Russian alleged to have masterminded a massive hacking of social networks including LinkedIn and Dropbox is now at the center of an extradition struggle between the United States and Russia. Yevgeniy Nikulin was detained in October 2016, in the Czech Republic capital of Prague, after US authorities issued an international arrest warrant for him. He was on vacation there with his girlfriend. A grand jury indictment filed in 2016 in California charges him with computer intrusion and aggravated identity theft, among other offenses. Nikulin denies all the charges. If convicted of all charges, he could face a maximum sentence of more than 50 years in prison and more than $2 million in fines.
But soon after his arrest, Russian authorities also sought his extradition. The Russian charge referred to the alleged theft from an online money transfer company back in 2009. The amount involved was $3,450... The Foreign Ministry in Moscow said soon afterward it was "actively working with the Czech authorities to prevent the extradition of a Russian citizen to the United States."
But soon after his arrest, Russian authorities also sought his extradition. The Russian charge referred to the alleged theft from an online money transfer company back in 2009. The amount involved was $3,450... The Foreign Ministry in Moscow said soon afterward it was "actively working with the Czech authorities to prevent the extradition of a Russian citizen to the United States."
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That was my immediate interpretation, yeah.
50 years in a US prison - or share some details about your work. No wonder the Russians don't want him over there.
Which? (Score:2)
I wonder which taker he would opt for. I suspect it's six of one and half-a-dozen of the other; really screwed either way.
Re:Which? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Which? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's more likely that he's worked for the Russians before and they don't want him to tell the Americans all the details.
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+5 Insightful.
Tinfoil hat much?
The boogeyman isn't hiding behind every corner.
Tinfoil? Really? If you give me (and others) a reasonable answer on why would Russia wants the guy with a charge for only $3,450 bank transfer fraud? Why would he be very important to them for that amount of money besides something else? It does not make sense at all.
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Why do you have to ruin an otherwise informative post by bringing up a highly contentious off-topic issue like that?
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I recall reading that Russia likes to recruit suitably experienced criminals into its various cybermischief units (e.g Fancybear, Cozybear, Internet Research Agency). Can't recall the exact link, though.
"We would like to extradite this young man and offer him a job."
Re: Which? (Score:1)
I recall the US doing the exact same thing.
I don't want him you can't have him (Score:4, Funny)
This is just Putin reminding the current US administration who's boss.
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What does Tony Danza have to do with it?
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Relentlessly portraying Putin as the demonic mastermind behind all that's going wrong in the West is wearing a bit thin for me. I have no connection with Russia, but I find much of the Kremlin's critique of Western (particularly US) foreign policy all too reasonable and plausible. Whether it comes from insincere actors or independent commentators, I couldn't care less; it's the content that counts.
As for Putin himself, he's not the Antichrist. He's just a hard-headed pragmatist trying to keep Russia afloa
Re: I don't want him you can't have him (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah we Americans kill political and journalist dissidents under the guise of accidents, too.
Here's reality: one party will always have more power than others. Which one do you want? If you want Russia, side with them, because they'll do the same thing America does when the tables are turned.
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Too fucking bad.
We've got a president who JUST TODAY issued a coordinated statement with Vladimir Putin saying that there should be a crackdown on CNNi. That fat orange motherfucker's administration has Russian connections that they lied about in such numbers that when Putin sneezes, Trump catches a cold.
I sincerely don't give a single fuck for what's "wearing thin" for you and wha
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So, just curious, does Putin order drone strikes on his own citizens? You might want to clean your own house before you start criticizing others. Jails Russian citizens? America tries to jail Russian citizens with their bullshit international arrest warrants. Why aren't you protesting about that?
CNN has a long history of lying their asses off about Trump. They're not called the Clinton News Network for nothing. Hell, Hillary has more connections to the Russians from the fake dossier than anything el
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You know the whole Uranium One story is made up, right? Nobody sold "20% of US uranium" to Russia. No uranium changed hands.
You accuse CNN of making up lies about Trump and then you bring out "Uranium One"?
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https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/935073656031666176
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov signed a protocol amending the 2000 Plutonium Management and Disposition Agreement on April 13, 2010. It enables new co-operation between the Department of Energy and Rosatom.
This document is from the United Nations Institute For Disarmament Research.
It explicitly states that Rosatom, after 2013, would be interested in having 20-25% of the US SWU market and wanted assurances
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http://www.factcheck.org/2017/... [factcheck.org]
If he's in Czech, then it's up to them. (Score:5, Informative)
Or, they can decide to not allow him to be extradited at all. Regardless, it's up to them to weigh whatever they estimate the costs to themselves might be for making a decision that is unpopular with somebody else.
Final answer, it's up the country he's currently in to decide when to allow, where to allow, and even *IF* to allow extradition. Full stop.
Re: If he's in Czech, then it's up to them. (Score:5, Funny)
After all, this Male is in the Czech.
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No mod points, but well played.
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Re: If he's in Czech, then it's up to them. (Score:4, Insightful)
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The Czech Republic, EU and NATO member, has to pick a side? This will be a very difficult decision.
Russian Red Team (Score:2)
The Russian charge is from 2009, so why the long wait, it is because they suddenly want him back when faced with a warrant from the Americans.
My money is that he part of their red team.
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Hopefully Russia succeeds (Score:1, Insightful)
50 years for hacking is retarded, there should be 0 extraditions to the US until they reform their justice system.
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It is not retarded, it is extremist. The US "justice" system is just as fanatical, violent and absolutely convinced they are doing it right as any other fanatics.
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There is no justice system anywhere in the world. It's all law systems.
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Would you rather do time in a Russian jail or American jail?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
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Russia might not have the most open and free system of legal justice, but the US incarcerates more people than any other country in the world, including North Korea. You might want to roll the dice and see if Russia will at least attempt to be reasonable
Plus, I hear you get all the free tea you can drink on the flight to Russia.
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Russia might not have the most open and free system of legal justice, but the US incarcerates more people than any other country in the world, including North Korea. You might want to roll the dice and see if Russia will at least attempt to be reasonable
Plus, I hear you get all the free tea you can drink [bbc.com] on the flight to Russia.
TFTFY.
Re:its the devil you know... (Score:4, Funny)
the US incarcerates more people than any other country in the world
We're number one!!! WOOOO! Yeah!
USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA!
Re:its the devil you know... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with you, Americans, is that you are too comfortably couched in your democracy and rule of the law. Yes, it is not perfect but if you think it is anything near what goes on in Russia that clearly shows how clueless you are.
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As an American, I'm still trying to wrap my head around how a 'Gran Jury' indictment in the state of California, warrants an International arrest warrant.
The leap of authority there is baffling to me, how seemingly simple it appears state or even Federal US law, can suddenly extend beyond US borders.
International Treaties are one thing. This however, just doesn't seem right to me at all.
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What rule of law would that be? The one that incarcerates more people than anyone on the planet? What democracy would that be? The one that produced the worst President ever in history? I don't see Russia using drones to kill their own citizens. I don't see Russia issuing international arrest warrants over trivial issues. I think you need to take a step back, stop waving the flag like a patriotic MORAN, and take a long, hard look at yourselves. America is a horrible country compared to the rest of th
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Mentioning the drone strikes is kind of stupid given that Russia had two civil wars in the past 25 years, and that is killing their own citizens by the very definition. Air strikes against field commanders were quite common back then.
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GO USA
GET A BRAIN MORANS
You idiots crack me up. LOL.
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The USA certainly executes more people than Russia, though -- even if you count Russia's extrajudicial executions/assassinations.
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Executing murderers who have been duly tried in a court of law by a jury of citizens and afforded every opportunity of due process and appeal is so far from what goes on in Russia or most of the rest of the world it is incomparable. The fact that you cannot grasp that simple fact makes you a microcepallic in the first degree and not worth further conversation...
Also (Score:2)
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> Reminder: Aaron Schwartz was looking at 35 years in prison for nothing more than a clever wget script.
This is incorrect. Aaron Swartz [check spelling] was attempting to download all of JSTOR, and its index information, in order to republish it for free. Doing this was not only criminal. It was stealing the resources of a non-profit which collects information and publishes, organized and usable, for medical and scientific research all over the world. It could make the resources available, for a short pe
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Chelsea Manning was looking at 60 years in prison from Government prosecutors.
Except Manning was facing those 60 for leaking classified materials. There were/are proper ways to whistleblow on classified projects and there are ways which it isn't proper. If you go outside the bounds dealing with classified materials and deliberately release them (please note, deliberate is different than inadvertent), you can expect to be facing significant amount of time in jail.
Re: its the devil you know... (Score:1)
Strangely enough, Obama pardoned Chelsea Manning and didn't pardon Edward Snowden. Yet Edward went through all the proper channels and followed proper procedure for handling a leak of classified materials. I wonder what exactly was considered during the pardons; time served perhaps?
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I think you meant 'more people per capita.'
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The United States has the largest prison population in the world, and the second-highest per-capita incarceration rate, behind Seychelles (which in 2014 had a total prison population of 735 out of a population of around 92,000). In 2013 in the USA, there were 698 persons incarcerated per 100,000 population.
Nope. [wikipedia.org] =/
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Because clearly, incarceration numbers, regardless of what those people did, is the key metric to determine if a society is just or not. Never mind that North Korea is more likely to just execute people who disagree with the government... Talk about infantile logic.
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Gee, I wonder why.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Who wants the vacation in Prague? (Score:2)
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we can afford to try and inflict our domestic laws on people in Prague
Not sure what you mean. Extradition implies that a person has committed crimes in another country and is if he is extradited, he will be tried in that country, not in Czechia.
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I can't be fully sorry for him (Score:3)
If this man is allegedly intelligent enough to break into Linkedin and Dropbox, than he should have known better than travel to a country that's an enthusiastic EU and NATO member. This is not a first. Some of the Russian black hat hackers or mobsters think they can con either russian companies or individuals or western, and then retire in some nice quiet bucolic place like Greece, Spain, or Czech republic.
The Czechs should auction him off (Score:2)