Was curious to see who screwed up my gaming time on PS3...Such a waste of talent...
EXCLUSIVE: It was one of
the hottest days of the year and evening temperatures were still
sweltering when two FBI agents wearing bulletproof vests under their
dark suits climbed the stairs of the Jacob Riis housing complex in New
York’s Lower East Side on June 7, 2011. Drenched in sweat, they knocked
on the steel door of a sixth-floor unit. It swung open to reveal a man
in his late twenties wearing jeans and a white T-shirt.
“I’m Hector,” he said.
The agents were suddenly face-to-face with “Sabu,” the computer
genius they had stalked for months, a quarry so elusive they hadn’t
pinned down his identity and location until just weeks before. The
suspected ringleader of the Anonymous offshoot group LulzSec, Hector
Xavier Monsegur and his web minions had just completed a month-long
reign of terror, hacking the CIA, Fox, Sony and several financial
institutions, causing, according to some estimates, billions of dollars
in damage around the world.
The nondescript public housing unit seemed an unlikely nerve center
for one of the world’s most wanted criminal masterminds, but the
28-year-old Monsegur himself is a study in such contradictions. An
unemployed computer programmer, welfare recipient and legal guardian of
two young children, Monsegur did not go to college and is a self-taught
hacker. Although his skills and intellect could command a lucrative
salary in the private sector, those who know him say he is lazy, an
underachiever complacent with his lifestyle.“He’s extremely intelligent,” a law enforcement official said. “Brilliant, but lazy.”
It was the laziness that got him.
Sabu had always been cautious, hiding his Internet protocol address
through proxy servers. But then just once he slipped. He logged into an
Internet relay chatroom from his own IP address without masking it. All
it took was once. The feds had a fix on him.
For weeks they waited, watching him, monitoring the online activity of the man they believed was the leader of LulzSec.
But then, late in the evening of June 7, they received word that Sabu
had been "doxed" -- meaning that for a very brief moment, someone had
posted Sabu’s real name and address online. Law enforcement feared Sabu
would see he’d been outed and begin destroying evidence of his hacking
career—and all traces of those he’d worked and communicated with online.
They had to move.
Agents had already subpoenaed Sabu’s Facebook account, finding stolen
credit card numbers he was selling to other hackers. They had enough to
charge him with aggravated identity theft, which carries a two-year
minimum sentence. But as the brains behind LulzSec, the man staring
across the doorway at them on that summer night last year was much more
valuable as a cooperating witness.
“It’s not me, you got the wrong guy,” Monsegur said, according to
sources who witnessed the interaction. “I don’t have a computer.”
Behind Monsegur, the agents saw the Ethernet cable snaking to his DSL modem, green lights blinking on and off.
The agents worked their prey, using the time-honored good cop/bad cop
routine. Bad cop stormed out of Monsegur’s apartment yelling, “That’s
it, no deal, it’s over, we’re locking you up.”
The computer genius finally gave in, surrendering to the most clichéd
tool in the law enforcement arsenal. But the agents had more than just
skills – they had leverage.
“It was because of his kids,” one of the two agents recalled. “He’d
do anything for his kids. He didn’t want to go away to prison and leave
them. That’s how we got him.”
Monsegur was quietly arrested on aggravated identity theft charges
and released on bail. On Aug. 15 he pleaded guilty to a dozen counts of
hacking-related charges and agreed to cooperate with the FBI. Monsegur
went right on living in the unit he shared with the children, supporting
them, five brothers and a sister and living off public assistance,
according to those who know him.
But from now on, he worked for the government he had once tried to attack at every turn.
Monsegur, according to his handlers, took his Internet name from a
Staten Island-born pro-wrestler who billed himself as a Saudi Arabian to
incite jingoistic arena crowds. Sabu the Elephant Boy wrestled on the
independent pro circuits in the 1980s and 1990s, developing a reputation
as a heel who shed as much blood as he drew.
It was his anti-government, anti-capitalist ideologies that caused
Monsegur to gravitate toward hacking, according to those who witnessed
his ascent. His rare blend of interpersonal skills, technical ability
and street cred, combined with the hacks he did, ensured his rapid
ascent in the hacker community. Driven by politics, Monsegur once
released personal information about Arizona law enforcement in response
to the state’s immigration law.
Anonymous and LulzSec members call themselves “hacktivists,” hackers
with an agenda, a theme that runs through Monsegur's career. For several
years he worked at LimeWire, one of a group of software companies that
created peer-to-peer sharing programs to help users "liberate" their
music.
Such file-sharing software obviously facilitated copyright
infringements -- and new networks to share music files after Napster was
shut down. LimeWire was eventually closed, slammed by the recording
industry group RIAA with a $105 million lawsuit. Monsegur lost his job
when the company was shuttered. With the exception of a stint as a
repo-man, he’s been unemployed ever since.
Given his prodigious skills, he needn’t have been, according to his handlers.
“Sabu could be making millions of bucks heading the IT security
department of a major company,” a law enforcement official said. “But
look at him, he’s impoverished, living off public assistance and was
forced between turning on his friends and spending a lifetime in jail.
“It’s sad, really.”
Source: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/03/06/exclusive-unmasking-worlds-most-wanted-hacker/
By: DirtyUncleBerty
In: Other News
Tags: LulzSec
Location: United States (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 5748 | Comments: 32 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
Advertisement below
|
|
| Liveleak on Facebook | |
|
LIKE Liveleak.com |
-
Hacking suspect Ryan Cleary 'has Asperger's syndrome'
-
How a Hacker Mastermind Was Brought Down by His Love of Xbox
-
US CERT director resigns after waves of cyber attacks from Anonymous
-
Radical Group Hacks Into AZ Law Enforcement Computers
-
Sony hackers hit FBI - press release.
-
The War on Web Anonymity
-
Hackers pirate PBS website, post fake story about Tupac still alive
-
Hacker Group Raids Fox.com, Targets FBI
-
LulzSec suspect arrested in UK.
-
"Anonymous" Targets Murdoch's Newspaper "The Sun" - Posts False Headline Of Owner's Death
-
LulzSec take down CIA Website
-
RSS Feed Hackers break into Arizona police computers




Hang the loser
Posted Mar-6-2012 ByWE ARE POWER (3486.16) 
WE ARE POWER View Channel Send Message
(3)
@WE ARE POWER Hang him... for hacking websites...
Nazi.
Posted Mar-6-2012 Byhellgremlin (763.02) hellgremlin Send Message
(-4)
@hellgremlin He's not a criminal on a big scale ? Surely hanging is due .
Posted Mar-7-2012 Bymonkeyboy61 (893.96) 
monkeyboy61 View Channel Send Message
(1)
@monkeyboy61 who determines what a criminal is, and who determines what criminals get the death sentence? the good ol usa , home of the slave
Posted Mar-7-2012 ByBoboShakes (81.80) 
BoboShakes View Channel Send Message
(-2)
@BoboShakes and land of the snake
Posted Mar-7-2012 ByMyheavynuts (500.00) 
Myheavynuts View Channel Send Message
(0)
Plutocrats and despots around the world sighed in relief today at this news, and resumed sipping on their Cognac while having a dozen people executed in celebration.
Posted Mar-6-2012 ByIkillRednecks (29.20) 
IkillRednecks View Channel Send Message
(2)
@IkillRednecks Of course those executions took place in a 3rd world country.
Posted Mar-6-2012 ByNomadicGod (222.80) NomadicGod View Channel Send Message
(1)
@NomadicGod But they were not US citizens.
After they were determined as such.
Posted Mar-7-2012 Byindigio (58.40) 
indigio View Channel Send Message
(0)
The Jester might be the one who doxed Sabu, he revealed his name back in July. Jester is one interesting guy and great a documenting his research as he attempts to roll up Jihadist websites, LulzSec and Anonymous.
http://th3j35t3r.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/even-topiary-didnt-know-what-he-was-getting-into/
Posted Mar-6-2012 Bysinglelife (831.82) singlelife View Channel Send Message
(1)
the worlds most wanted hackers are the ones they dont even know exist
Posted Mar-7-2012 Bylike a boss (1012.20) 
like a boss View Channel Send Message
(1)
Another libtard terrorist, imagine that
Posted Mar-6-2012 Bymattb1974 (1070.78) 
mattb1974 View Channel Send Message
(1)
@mattb1974 Terrorist... for taking down websites...
If he's a terrorist you're a fascist.
Posted Mar-6-2012 Byhellgremlin (763.02) hellgremlin Send Message
(-2)
real hackers arent doxed like this bunch of clowns.
Posted Mar-6-2012 Bymastodon (502.48) 
mastodon View Channel Send Message
(1)
great read :o)
Posted Mar-6-2012 Byfuchajen (4201.64) 
fuchajen View Channel Send Message
(1)
manufactured crimes from the crime factory
Posted Mar-6-2012 ByImSmarterThanYou (78.30) 
ImSmarterThanYou View Channel Send Message
(1)
won't be missed.
Posted Mar-6-2012 Bydietcokesucks (877.30) 
dietcokesucks View Channel Send Message
(1)
wois this old man
Posted Mar-7-2012 Byjay333dee (339.00) jay333dee View Channel Send Message
(0)
sabu!!!!!!!!
Posted Mar-6-2012 Bykanns01 (790.46) 
kanns01 View Channel Send Message
(0)
Obviously not as smart as he wants people to believe.
Posted Mar-7-2012 ByFreejay (3826.16) 
Freejay View Channel Send Message
(0)
Hahaha they always sell eachother out :) this scumbag should be in jail for the rest of his life.
Posted Mar-7-2012 Bythinkslaughter (1489.60) 
thinkslaughter View Channel Send Message
(0)
RIP
Posted Mar-6-2012 ByMAKMAK (2413.90) MAKMAK View Channel Send Message
(0)