Andrew James
Miller, a 23-year-old resident of Devon, Pennsylvania, was arrested on
Thursday and charged with one count of conspiracy, two counts of
computer fraud, and one count of access device fraud, according to a statement issued by the Justice Department's Criminal Division.
According to the indictment, between
2008 and 2011, Miller and others allegedly remotely hacked into computer
networks belonging to RNK Telecommunications Inc., a Massachusetts
company; Crispin Porter and Bogusky Inc., a Colorado advertising agency;
the University of Massachusetts; the U.S. Department of Energy; and
other institutions and companies.
The indictment alleges that when
Miller hacked into the computers, he obtained other users’ access
credentials to the compromised computers. He and his co-conspirators
then allegedly sold access to these computer networks as well as other
access credentials.
After gaining unauthorized
access to these systems, Miller is alleged to have installed Trojan
horse programs that gave him access to the networks which he and his
co-conspitrators sold online.Miller and his co-conspirators were
discovered after they attempted to sell access to the victim networks to
an undercover FBI agent.
The indictment details an IRC
conversation between Miller and an undercover agent in which Miller
exchanges access to RNK’s servers and a list of hundreds of user names
and passwords for two payments of $500.00. Payment was to be made to
Andrew Miller of Lancaster, PA, via Western Union.
Miller later requested two
payments of $600 via Western Union in exchange for a U-Mass database
dump and $1,000.00 for access to CPB Group. At one point, Miller
attempted to sell the FBI access to a supercomputer belonging to the
DoE’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center for $50,000.
Miller faces up to five years in
prison for the conspiracy count and one of the computer fraud counts,
and up to 10 years in prison on one of the computer fraud counts and the
access device fraud count, to be followed by three years of supervised
release, a $250,000 fine and restitution, if convicted.
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