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Police Arrest U.K. Teen Suspected Of Hack Attacks, Rumored To Have LulzSec Ties

Lulzsec Hacker Arrested

CASSANDRA VINOGRAD   06/21/11 11:15 PM ET   AP

LONDON — A 19-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of involvement with cyber attacks on Sony Corp. and the CIA website, British police said Tuesday.

The arrest took place following a joint operation by its Internet crimes unit and the FBI, the Metropolitan Police said. The FBI declined to comment.

British police would not say if the suspect was tied to the Lulz Security hacking collective, which has claimed responsibility for recent high-profile attacks, but confirmed that a computer seized in the operation will be examined for Sony data. Police declined to identify the suspect because he has not been charged with a crime.

Lulz had boasted of successfully hacking Sony in addition to subsequent attacks on the CIA web page and the U.S. Senate computer system. The hackers recently called for "war" on governments that control the Internet.

Lulz appeared dismissive of the arrest, saying on Twitter that it used the arrested man's server, but that the man is not part of the group.

"Clearly the U.K. police are so desperate to catch us that they've gone and arrested someone who is, at best, mildly associated with us," it Tweeted.

Although little is known about Lulz, hacker collectives are typically loose networks with diffuse supporters in more than one location, so an arrest could do little to bring down an organization and even encourage supporters to carry on a group's cause.

The teenager was arrested in the commuter town of Wickford, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) northeast of London, late Monday on suspicion of hacking and fraud offenses and taken to a central London police station for questioning, police said.

Police said the arrest resulted from an investigation into network intrusions and distributed denial-of-service attacks against "a number of international business and intelligence agencies by what is believed to be the same hacking group."

Officers are conducting forensic examinations on "a significant amount of material" found in the search of a home following the arrest.

Lulz has taken credit for hacking into Sony Corp. – where more than 100 million user accounts were compromised – and defacing the PBS website after the U.S. public television station aired a documentary seen as critical of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The hackers also say they are responsible for attacks on the CIA website and the U.S. Senate computer system.

Most recently, Lulz said it had compromised the security of more than 1,000 accounts of an FBI partner organization and brought down the website of Britain's FBI equivalent, the Serious Organized Crime Agency.

The group has taken to taunting victims of its attacks on Twitter using the handle "LulzSec."

On Monday, Lulz Security issued a statement calling for a united hacker effort against governments and organizations that control the Internet.

The group said it was teaming with fellow hacker collective Anonymous, and encouraged others to fight corruption and attack any government or agency that "crosses their path" including banks and other "high-ranking establishments."

Anonymous is a group of online activists that has claimed responsibility for attacking companies online such as Visa, MasterCard and PayPal over their severing of ties with WikiLeaks following that group's release of troves of sensitive documents. Anonymous also led a campaign against the Church of Scientology.

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Associated Press writer Meera Selva contributed to this report

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Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/cassvinograd

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LONDON — A 19-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of involvement with cyber attacks on Sony Corp. and the CIA website, British police said Tuesday. The arrest took place following a joi...
LONDON — A 19-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of involvement with cyber attacks on Sony Corp. and the CIA website, British police said Tuesday. The arrest took place following a joi...
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Paul The Octopus
My micro-bio is empty.
11:23 PM on 06/21/2011
It's on.
09:05 PM on 06/21/2011
I guess we should give the U.K. a pat on the back. Using the vast resources at their disposal, they managed to find some 19 year old kid who MIGHT be connected to a hacker group that is more than likely vastly larger than, well, this kid. Impressive. I guess we'll have to wait and see if he really is the guy he's looking for, and if he is, then that's one down, thousands left to go, a thrilling chase to be sure..
That's assuming more disenfranchised youth decide to resist the siren call and instead go about doing what they're expected to be doing, you know, like looking forward to nothing.
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03:14 PM on 06/21/2011
I have no problems with these hacker groups. what I find scary is how the big companies they have been teasing have managed to get governments out to do their rent a cop work.
11:35 AM on 06/21/2011
LulzSec has denied the arrest of their member.. read: http://bit.ly/mH9Fdj
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oneyippie
Leaning far to your left
11:03 AM on 06/21/2011
HP is censoring the news about this!
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oneyippie
Leaning far to your left
11:43 AM on 06/21/2011
Check this out! LulzSec and Anonymous declare war on governments. http://security.cbronline.com/news/lulzsec-anonymous-join-hands-to-wage-war-against-governments-210611
10:22 AM on 06/21/2011
Waiting for the US to declare hackers as terrorists and the ensuing
witch hunt capturing suspects and sending them down to Guantanamo Bay
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intellifran
insert clever line here...
10:56 AM on 06/21/2011
They should. These little pricks fit the defiition. They attacked infrastructure to cause significant damage in order to make a political point. Who have they helped? certianly not the customers of sony or paypal. Thanks to them millions of people's information has been compromised and their idnetities are vulnerable to theft.
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12:26 PM on 06/21/2011
Intellifran, I think you are dumb. If I was the head of CIA or MI6, I would have given these guys an award and hired them at 5 million bucks a year. They haven't helped anybody or anything. Thats true, I agree. But at least they are showing dimwits like you, who sit pretty on their computers and processing everything online, from tax returns to mortagage payments to bank accounts with a sense of security, how stupid you, and all of us are. They deserve and award and customers should hit out at all of these corporations for hiring incompletent people to program these online, so-called "secured" processes. And so should the government. Any government.
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Jason Cisco
Ideas are bulletproof
01:49 PM on 06/21/2011
Sony is now considered infrastructure?! I would love to hear you explain how Sony is deemed infrastructure in ANY country.
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12:53 AM on 06/22/2011
and then we can invade iraq again! yay!