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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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have a read of this .. its the timeline given by the Telegraph .. Gary McKinnon extradition: timeline on how the fight unfolded - Telegraph |
Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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We have the right to debate and disagree, my interpretation may disagree with yours, but I do not post something as fact without being certain of what I post. Your buddy jumped and fell on his face by not even being aware of the timeframe of this case. Spuggie and yourself tried to score cheap shots, which judging from what i've read on this forum is beneath both of you, and you both now have egg on your face. A simple apology would have been nice, instead I get another cheap shot. You are so much better than this Cashman..I'm disappointed |
Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
Relevance...if a government will lie over something as serious as weapons of mass destruction, why would they not lie about the amount of damage done by a cyber terrorist
Relevance..proof of miscarriage of justice and inability to receive a fair trial Relevance...this point is debatable in law, I am prepared to stand corrected but I do not believe that there is a law covering where you should be tried in case of cross border cyber crime, and therefore but for a flawed extradition treaty etc..etc.. The last point as I stated has nothing to do with the case, it was simply a statement that it has highlighted that we have a biased treaty that the current government doesn't give a fig about. I wont slam the door on my way out |
Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
just mind it doesnt hit you on the ass then
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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BBC NEWS | UK | Hacker step closer to extradition BBC NEWS | Technology | Profile: Gary McKinnon When Britain's hi-tech crime unit finally came for him 2002, Mr McKinnon was not surprised. He told the BBC: "I think I almost wanted to be caught, because it was ruining me. I had this classic thing of wanting to be caught so there would be an end to it." He thought he would be tried in Britain, and that he might get, at the most, three to four years in prison. Then, later that year, the United States decided to indict him with charges that could mean up to 70 years in a US prison. It has never been entirely clear why it took US officials until 2005 to begin extradition proceedings. Gary McKinnon's been fighting extradition ever since, on the grounds that he never intended anything malicious by his hacking. He's been free on bail, but it has been a strange kind of freedom. |
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Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
A one sided extradition treaty is another example of our government's subservience to the U.S.A.
Never mind being America's poodle, our government's not only willingly bent over, but also handed them the lubrication. By the way, I think the hacker knew exactly what penalties he faced, and his arrogance is evident from the messages he left on the hacked systems, and the Asperger's is just being used as a defence for his being a cretin. |
Re: Hacker loses extradition battle
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