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George Bronk Used Facebook To Hack Women's Emails

DON THOMPSON   01/14/11 09:19 PM ET   AP

Facebook Hack

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In a cautionary tale for users of social-networking sites, a California man has admitted using personal information he gleaned from Facebook to hack into women's e-mail accounts, then send nude pictures of them to everyone in their address book.

The California attorney general's office said Friday that George Bronk, 23, commandeered the e-mail accounts of dozens of women in the U.S. and England. He then scanned the women's "sent" folders for nude and seminude photos and videos, and forwarded any he found to all the women's contacts, prosecutors said.

Bronk coerced one woman into sending him more explicit photographs by threatening to distribute the pictures he already had. One victim told authorities the intrusion felt like "virtual rape."

Bronk, who lives in the Sacramento suburb of Citrus Heights, pleaded guilty Thursday to seven felonies in Sacramento County Superior Court, including computer intrusion, false impersonation and possession of child pornography.

Prosecutors are seeking a six-year prison term when Bronk returns for a sentencing evaluation March 10.

His attorney, Monica Lynch of Roseville, called her client a "23-year-old boy going on 15."

"He's accepted full responsibility. It's a tragic situation," she said.

Lynch said she will argue for less than a six-year sentence.

Prosecutors said Bronk would scan women's Facebook accounts looking for those who posted their e-mail addresses. He would then study their Facebook postings to learn the answers to common security questions like their favorite color or father's middle name.

He contacted the women's e-mail providers and used the information to gain control of their accounts. He also often gained control of their Facebook accounts by hijacking their passwords, then posted compromising photographs on their Facebook pages and other Internet sites.

"This case highlights the fact that anyone with an e-mail account is vulnerable to identity theft," Attorney General Kamala Harris said in a statement announcing Bronk's guilty plea.

Investigators found 172 e-mail files containing explicit photographs of women when they searched Bronk's computer in September, according to a court affidavit. They were able to track his victims to England, Washington, D.C., and 17 states: Alabama, Arizona, California, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Virginia and Washington.

"He is a sick individual," said 22-year-old Danielle Piscak of Parkland, Wash., one of Bronk's victims.

Piscak said one of her friends alerted her that nude photographs she had sent privately to her husband were posted on her Facebook page last fall. Facebook removed the photos the next day.

"I have a network of like 1,500 people, so they all saw my pictures. So my graduating class of 2007 saw that. I'm in the military, so all my army friends saw that," Piscak said. She had to explain the embarrassing situation to her family and husband, from whom she is separated.

Piscak used a different e-mail account to contact the person who had hacked her page.

"I said, 'Why are you doing this?' and he said, 'Because it's funny,'" Piscak said in a telephone interview. The Associated Press does not identify victims in sex cases as a matter of policy, but Piscak gave permission for her name to be used. She also said she has agreed to tell her story on a nationally televised talk show.

Piscak said she fears the postings could harm her future in the military and her plans for a career in criminal justice, though most people who saw the photos were understanding.

A second victim, Stephanie, 24, of Los Angeles, said she, the FBI and other authorities tried for seven hours to remove an album of 10 photographs that Bronk posted on her account before Facebook took it down.

"Then he wrote just crass, racist, disgusting comments on people's walls that I was friends with," said Stephanie, who did not want her last name used for fear the story could harm her career. She said she felt violated, "kind of a rape-like situation."

Stephanie said she originally had sent the private photos to a boyfriend, only to have them seen by her college professors and co-workers.

Both of the victims, along with Bronk's attorney, said Facebook should have caught Bronk's activities more quickly. Facebook spokesmen did not return telephone or e-mail messages Friday.

Bronk began his hacking in December 2009, prosecutors said. He will have to register as a sex offender because of his guilty plea.

Investigators caught on after a victim called Connecticut State Police, which referred the complaint to the California Highway Patrol. They used information from Bronk's confiscated computer to e-mail questionnaires to 3,200 of his Internet contacts, asking if they had been victimized.

Forty-six women said they had. Bronk was arrested in October and remains jailed on $500,000 bond.

The attorney general's office advised those using e-mail and social-networking sites to pick security questions and answers that aren't posted on public sites, or to add numbers or other characters to common security answers. Additional safety tips are on the California attorney general's website.

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In a cautionary tale for users of social-networking sites, a California man has admitted using personal information he gleaned from Facebook to hack into women's e-mail acco...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In a cautionary tale for users of social-networking sites, a California man has admitted using personal information he gleaned from Facebook to hack into women's e-mail acco...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Henry Owen Creque V
08:18 PM on 01/18/2011
delete sent items, problem solved
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chipchuck
Rethink that...
09:49 AM on 01/18/2011
Life lessons. Don't put photos on the internet you don't want everyone to see and don't think a blackmailer will stop if you meet their demands.

She should have given her boyfriend a poloroid.
11:17 PM on 01/17/2011
The idea that the women in this case are in any way to blame or should be held responsible for being violated by hackers is just ridiculous. When you walk across the street @ a green light and get hit by a car, no one says, "Oh.. well you shouldn't have been walking across the street then! Duh! I mean, don't you know there are people who speed and you could possibly get hit by a car?!?" They don't say that because there is a reasonable expectation that laws and law abiding citizens prevail. You do what you're told when you set up passwords, you set up security features on your computer as best as you can, etc. It's NOT your fault that there are people in the world who will take advantage of you and the vulnerability of the system. Why would you think anyone would hack into YOUR computer? I've been working with computers for about 22yrs and no one has ever hacked into my computer or into the computer of anyone I know. It is not an inherent feature of the computer, or the internet, that someone will steal your files and violate your privacy, but we sure act as if it is. Ready to blame anyone who dares trust that they're protected. If anything, the software and application developers are at fault. They need to constantly stay ahead of the criminals, and they're obviously not doing that.

Ok. Vent over. ;-)
01:31 PM on 01/23/2011
What a stupid argument. You're required to drive when the light is green at a stoplight. You're not required to post yor nude pics on facebook.
12:07 AM on 01/25/2011
yeah I know that I'm a n00b for double posting but also the huffington post or w/e sucks for not realizing when someone double posts and spams
01:43 PM on 01/23/2011
What a stupid argument. You're required to drive in a green light at a stoplight. You're not required to post your nude pics on facebook.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxPowerXP
10:40 PM on 01/17/2011
Am I just behind the times or is emailing pictures of your naughty bits around willy-nilly (no pun intended) the hip new thing? Who even *has* nude photos of themselves lying around?
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one1byke
Easy no Man.
11:21 AM on 01/17/2011
oh yeah... Chemistry.com is MUCH better....
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INDIVIDUALTERRY
no to the collective!
11:08 AM on 01/17/2011
I guess if it was Victor Assange doing the hacking it would be alright.
Maybe he was starting wikileaks 2.0 ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Benjamin Rosenfeld
12:26 PM on 01/17/2011
Who is Victor Assange? If you meant Julian Assange, then you have been misinformed. Julian did not hack into anything. all of the information that he has, all of it, was given to him by other people who acquired said information on their own without have been requested to do so by anybody.
06:10 AM on 01/17/2011
For me it is beyond understanding why these women saved compromising images in their email inboxes or other remote folders. I don't try to defend or excuse the hacker, but I don't understand the purpose of keeping those kind of images in a place those women have no real control who get the access. At least Facebook or their own ISP email administrators, have access to everything which is saved in their accounts and they are not their lovers or friends, not even exactly compared to doctors who may need access to this kind of material.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eileenla
Author, "Sacred Economics"
06:21 AM on 01/17/2011
Most people who use computers have little or no idea that the data they store on their systems can be accessed by a hacker through methods they can't understand. You forget that the level of sophistication of the average computer user falls far short of that of the typical hacker.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
11:12 AM on 01/17/2011
simpelest techiniques too. I remember one of my cohort back in highschool using a burned copy of mac os on the computers in the library to boot from the disc and started playing ponography. This was after a leeeeengthy discussion with the librarian about how easy it would be and the librarian of course going on and on about how secure the network was. Next day he called her over and showed her how easy it was with a simple trick.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxPowerXP
10:37 PM on 01/17/2011
Hacking into someone's email does not give you the ability to peruse whatever data they have on whatever PC. Sending someone nude photos via your webmail and having it stick around in your sent folder is the more likely culprit.
05:38 AM on 01/17/2011
He used FB to hack their EMAIL accounts. THAT'S where he got the pics. ...Jeez...
05:36 AM on 01/17/2011
Wow. Amazing how many people comment without having read the article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xanxia
Dazed and Confused
05:13 AM on 01/17/2011
Facebook is a social site that involves millions of people and has poor security measures. It shouldn't be made too personal. Leave your personal life and naked pictures out of your facebook. Its crazy the things people share in their walls and albums.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxPowerXP
10:39 PM on 01/17/2011
Did you happen to notice the article beneath the headline at all?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
03:54 AM on 01/17/2011
You just go ahead and keep that facebook account, and keep putting all your info on it as if the world was a beautiful facebook wonderland.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sf omega man
Taming elephants since 1996
12:24 AM on 01/17/2011
You know, someone ought to have told this genius that there are a lot easier (and legal) ways to get nudity off the internet.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:46 PM on 01/16/2011
So much for inferiority complex, low self esteem and sexual deprivation...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
03:54 AM on 01/17/2011
So much for Facebook being a useless and dangerous waste of time.
08:14 AM on 01/17/2011
Your being too harsh. I don't use Facebook but I recognize that is entertainment. I would never know aspects of extended family life if my wife didnt use it to keep in touch with family. I simply dont have the time to call everyone.

She can surf a half dozen sites, get an update and go back to doing laundry while I cook dinner. It's a time issue. Based on reading my uncle had gone back into the hospital for cancer I was able to call them and let them know I was thinking of them and if I could help.

Do you keep intouch with EVERYONE in your family ? All of your friends ? Probably not.

I agree with you rougebaisers that it can be very dangerous and superficial. It's not where you want to go its where you start a conversation.

But watching television is more wasteful than communicating with friends. At least your typing thoughts which require a modest molecular effort. Yes ?
03:58 PM on 01/16/2011
My question is, how was he able to access their Facebook profiles in the first place? Did all of these women have their profiles open to 'Everyone'? If not, does that mean we're all vulnerable, even though we have strict privacy settings?
05:52 PM on 01/16/2011
Hello everyone! Actually he hacked all of our accounts and e-mail accounts. My passwords were pretty complex actually, so I was shocked when it happened. FYI be careful and change your passwords.
06:32 PM on 01/16/2011
Thank you! I don't have any personal info in my FB account, but I'll warn my friends who still do. Thank you for sharing your story, and I'm sorry this happened to you!
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Libertarian09
Anti War Socialist with a taste for freedom
07:40 PM on 01/16/2011
They seem reluctant to post your reply to me so I am obliged to respond here

"DUDE GET IT THROUGH YOUR HEAD........."

DUDETTE .......WHAT PART OF ANYTHING ON A COMPUTER THAT IS CONNECTED TO THE INTERNET IS INSECURE ARE YOU NOT GETTING THROUGH YOUR HEAD?

I'm sorry that your privacy was violated but all I was trying to say is that encryption, passwords... whatever is never going to offer you any real security. The only way you can prevent sensitive information from being hacked into is to not have it on a computer that is online. Whatever security measures you might wish to implement they are measures created to deal with previous flaws in digital security, they can never prevent the latest techniques used by people of questionable ethics
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
03:13 PM on 01/16/2011
Is this guy in the wrong for stealing the images and using them for blackmail and worse? Most definitely.

BUT....
If you put something out there via ANY form on the web, especially if you store it outside of your computer, others can get it. Lesson, if you don't want naked pictures out there, DON'T SEND NAKED PICTURES!!!