Obama softens stance on accused UK hacker McKinnon

26.05.2011
President Obama has thrown a nugget of hope to accused U.K. hacker Gary McKinnon, describing the long-running extradition case as being "in the hands of the British legal system."

The president's words at the end of his state visit to the U.K. were a matter of tone as much as substance, but were noticeably less harsh than those offered by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder during his visit only two weeks ago. McKinnon has fought extradition to the U.S., where he faces charges of breaking into dozens of military servers.

"We have proceeded through all the processes required under our extradition agreements," said President Obama during a joint press conference held with British Prime Minister David Cameron. "It is now in the hands of the British legal system. We have confidence in the British legal system coming to a just conclusion. And so we await resolution, and we'll be respectful of that process."

In a U.K. television interview, Holder had been more forthright. "McKinnon is a person who committed serious crimes resulting in about $1 million worth of damages in the United States. There has been a review by seven judges here in the U.K. who made the determination that his extradition was appropriate," he said. http://news.techworld.com/security/3279678/us-still-wants-to-put-gary-mckinnon-on-trial/

The subject is considered politically charged enough in the U.K. for Cameron to have formally raised it during talks Wednesday that were part of President Obama's visit. This mirrored an identical discussion that took place in Washington, D.C., during Cameron's visit to the U.S. in July 2010. http://news.techworld.com/security/3232704/obama-cameron-discuss-nasa-hacker-gary-mckinnon-case/

The case of Gary McKinnon will go down as one of the longest extradition sagas in the history of either country, not to mention the biggest hack of U.S. military and government servers ever uncovered. McKinnon is accused of breaking into 97 servers between February 2001 and March 2002, causing various levels of damage and disruption. The U.S. first requested his extradition in 2002 after a federal grand jury indicted him on seven counts of hacking.