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The Courts

Imprisoned 'Anonymous' Hacktivist Martin Gottesfeld Files His First Appeal (dailywire.com) 41

In early 2019, Martin Gottesfeld of Anonymous was sentenced under America's "Computer Fraud and Abuse Act" to 10 years in federal prison for his alleged role in the 2014 DDoS attacks on healthcare and treatment facilities around Boston. (Gottesfeld was sentenced by the same judge who oversaw the Aaron Swartz case.)

Gottesfeld has just filed his first appeal, and Slashdot reader Danngggg shares this new interview with Gottesfeld's attorney Brandon Sample. The upshot? Brandon Sample: If the court agrees with our arguments, for example, on the Speedy Trial Act, then that would result in dismissal of the indictment against him. And so, he would have no conviction at that point. There's a variety of different outcomes that could potentially flow from the arguments that have been raised in the appeal. If he wins, say for example, the argument that his lawyer should have been allowed off the case, well, then that would undo the conviction as well, and he would be entitled to another trial.

If the indictment is dismissed, then the government is going to have to make a decision about whether or not this is really a case that they want to prosecute all over again...

Daily Wire: Do you see this being successful, a strong case?

Brandon Sample: The appeal? I think we have a really good chance. I do.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Imprisoned 'Anonymous' Hacktivist Martin Gottesfeld Files His First Appeal

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  • Oh, this prick (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ChoGGi ( 522069 ) <slashdot@cho[ ].org ['ggi' in gap]> on Saturday September 26, 2020 @12:43PM (#60545878) Homepage

    Don't DDoS hospitals dumbshit (even if some doctors working there are pricks).

    somewhat related: https://abcnews.go.com/Interna... [go.com]

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      He was careful to DDOS things like their PR and fundraising and not anything involving admissions or patient care.

      • by ChoGGi ( 522069 )

        Mistakes can happen, so he should be happy he didn't cause anymore damage than he did.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          I agree, it was risky. However, he should be punished for the damage he actually did, not the theoretical maximum damage he could have done had he screwed up. Otherwise, every incident of jaywalking would be prosecuted as causing a 30 car pile-up with fatalities.

      • Oh horse shit, you sjames are acting as an accomplice in attacking hospitals in a terroristic fashion by lying to give comfort to the terrorist.

        Neither you nor he were ever given, or possess now, information about how these hospitals had their computer systems and networks designed.

        Nobody with industry experience would believe that you have the information necessary to dive up your attack like that. What you're helping him with is to attack hospitals, full stop.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          So I guess you believe that defense attorneys should go to prison with their clients, perhaps the jury as well in the event they find "not guilty"?

          I wouldn't want to live in your hellworld.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      No patient records were interfered with; mainly he messed with a fundraising campaign. It's still a dick move, but he is not, as some local papers called him, a "cyberterrorist".

    • Don't DDoS hospitals dumbshit

      I say give 10 lashes to anybody that called him a "hacktivist."

  • Attorney says his client likely to win case! Unbelievable!

    • Re: BREAKING NEWS! (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mbeckman ( 645148 )
      The penalty for ANY deliberate DoS attack should be at least ten years hard labor. Sit-around prison is too good for them. Because such attacks are always premeditated, and harm innocent parties, there is no room for moderation in sentencing. There can be no extenuating circumstances. Just as you canâ(TM)t accidentally rob a bank, you canâ(TM)t accidentally assault marshall the bots used for a DoS attack. DoS attackers need a deterrent. As anyone whoâ(TM)s had their business decimated by suc
      • > The penalty for ANY deliberate DoS attack should be at least ten years hard labor

        May I respectfully disagree? Some DOS or "denital of service" is from simply encouraging people to access a website manually due to a public announcement: being "slashdotted" is a real problem for many modest websites. a DDOS, a distributed denial of service attack with a botnet, does show malice.

        • DDoSing a hospital may not be in the same category of pure evil as a ransomware attack, but it can still kill people.

        • I said “deliberate” DoS attack. That’s an attack planned, controlled, and perpetrated by the attacker. It’s not cheerleading people to visit the website. So no. and I make no distinction between and DDoS and a DoS attack. They are both deliberate malicious attempts to deny people access to their legitimate services. That’s criminal, it doesn’t matter if you use a method that happens to be harder to block.
      • I would also say that the attackers aren't the only ones that should be held accountable.

        I'd also like to go after the botnet herders amassing so many zombies in the first place, and the spammers that send out the malware that infects them.

        Finally, I'd like ISPs to be held accountable for not putting zombie broadband users under quarantine.

        • Clearly, botnet “herders” are also DOS attackers. so 10 years for them too when you can find them. As for punishing ISPs because they didn’t do something you felt they are supposed to do to protect you, sorry, ISPs don’t provide protection. That’s your job. I hope you got some.
          • Well really it's the people who let their infected computers spread crap on the internet, or maybe you feel that your local chemical plant should be free to dump toxic waste in your back yard?
            • Well, really it's not. There is plenty of blame to go around for allowing DoS attacks. Microsoft's Windows Virus Development Platform, for example. Worse IoT device manufacturers have shipped ridiculously easily Botted devices. Neither security failure is the fault of "the people who let their infected computers spread crap".

              It's too late to fix that now, so bellyaching about it is pointless. However, a ten year mandatory hard labor prison sentence is an excellent deterrent, and I argue it's a perfectly
  • Even this kid-gloves article makes him look like an asshole who refuses to take responsibility for anything.

    Marty would oftentimes, when there would be disputes or disagreements between him and his counsel . . . when Judge Gorton presided over those proceedings, he would accede to the request by the attorney and close the courtroom.

    Marty’s asserting that that violated his right to a public trial.

    It takes chutzpah to argue that granting your attorney's request for privacy while you bicker with him denied you the right to a public trial.

  • Starting with this asshole (you don't DDOS my internet). We should export all of our prisoners to Chinese prisons. This will lower our cost and make the prison sentences much more effective.

    • If he's talented at all, he won't stay in their prison. He'll be made to work for one of their black hat teams.

  • Anonymous is not a group. It is a movement.

  • Including the mention of an unrelated case that can reasonably be counted on to evoke an emotional reaction from us readers is bottom-of-the-barrel scum behavior. This asshat is not Aaron Swartz.

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