Europe
        

Society

UK teenager charged with hacking attacks

Updated: 2011-06-23 10:41

(Agencies)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

WICKFORD, England - British police said on Wednesday they had charged a teenager with launching a series of cyber attacks against a national law enforcement agency and two well-known British music industry bodies.

Ryan Cleary, 19, was earlier held as part of a joint investigation with the US FBI into recent attacks on high profile websites.  

UK teenager charged with hacking attacks
Members of the media gather outside the home of Ryan Cleary, a British teenager arrested in Wickford, eastern England, June 22 2011.[Photo/Agencies]

London's Metropolitan Police said in a statement that he Cleary is accused of attacking the website of Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA).  

He has also been charged with carrying out attacks against websites owned by the British Phonographic Industry and the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, police added.  

Cleary, of Wickford, a quiet suburban town to the northeast of London, is due to appear in a London court on Thursday charged with five offences under the Criminal Law Act and Computer Misuse Act.

The detached house where he lives had all the curtains drawn and a sign on the door reading: "To all concerned, please do not knock for an interview as I'm unable to comment."

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Paul Stephenson described his arrest in the global hunt for a group suspected of targeting companies and police forces as "very significant". He did not elaborate.  

However, an undercover group that claims responsibility for attacks on the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Britain's SOCA and Sony Corp rejected suggestions that the teenager was a leading figure.

The Lulz Security (LulzSec) group of hackers, which says it has hacked into the websites of the CIA, SOCA and Sony, distanced themselves from Cleary and dismissed any suggestion he was the group's mastermind.

"Clearly the UK police are so desperate to catch us that they've gone and arrested someone who is, at best, mildly associated with us. Lame," the group said on its Twitter website.

"Ryan Cleary is not part of LulzSec; we house one of our many legitimate chatrooms on his IRC server, but that's it."

Members of LulzSec, which often uses so-called denial-of-service attacks to overwhelm websites with internet traffic, are believed to be scattered around the world collaborating via secret chatrooms.

Security experts say the group emerged from Anonymous, a hacker activist group which became well-known for targeting companies and institutions that opposed WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange.  

Hackers have also targeted the International Monetary Fund, Lockheed Martin Corp , Citigroup Inc , and Google in recent serious security breaches although no group has claimed responsibility for those attacks.

E-paper

Pret-a-design

China is taking bigger strides to become a force in fashion.

Preview of the coming issue
Franchise heating up
Party place

European Edition

Specials

My China story

Foreign readers are invited to share your China stories.

Mom’s the word

Italian expat struggles with learning English and experiences the joys of motherhood again.

Lenovo's challenge

Computer maker takes on iconic brand apple with range of stylish, popular products

Vice-President visits Italy
Sky is the limit
Quest for green growth