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Stratfor hacker Hammond held in contempt for refusing to answer grand jury questions
Just
months before he was to be released from federal prison where he is serving
time for hacking intelligence firm Statfor and releasing information to
WikiLeaks , activist and hacker Jeremy
Hammond, was found to be in contempt of court for failing to answer
questions before a grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA).Hammond pleaded guilty in May 2013 to exposing
millions of emails in the infamous December 2011 hack of Austin, Texas-based
Stratfor, which also included the theft of 60,000 credit card numbers from
clients that the hackers purportedly used to make $700,000 worth of donations
to charities.I knew then that
my actions could land me behind bars, yet I fought on anyway; after a dozen
arrests and even a prior federal prison sentence for hacking, I chose once
again to use my computer skills to attack the systems of the rich and powerful
as part of the Anonymous federal case I am doing time for today,” Hammond said
in a statement expressing outrage at the contempt charges so close to his
scheduled release from prison. “When I
pled guilty, I took responsibility for my actions and my actions alone. I never
agreed to be debriefed or testify in any way, unlike the government’s informant
Hector Monsegur, aka Sabu,” who
only received a year of probation. “In my case, the
government, through its informant, Sabu, instigated numerous hacks, asking me
to break into governments and companies all over the world,” Hammond said. “Nearly
a decade later, this misconduct remains ignored. The NSA continues to surveil
everyone and launch cyberattacks” while “Chelsea
Manning and I are doing hard time in this dump for the “crime” of refusing
to allow our spirits to break, after ‘serving’ our sentences for exposing
government and corporate corruption.”
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