New Mexico Man Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Directing Computer Attacks Against Websites of Do
Source: Justice Department
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, May 17, 2018
New Mexico Man Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison for Directing Computer Attacks Against Websites of Dozens of Victims and Felon-In-Possession Charges
A New Mexico man was sentenced today in St. Paul, Minnesota, for directing computer attacks against the websites of his prior employers, business competitors and public services, and felon-in-possession of a firearm charges. Acting Assistant Attorney General John P. Cronan of the Department of Justices Criminal Division; United States Attorney Gregory G. Brooker of the District of Minnesota; and Special Agent in Charge Jill Sanborn of the Federal Bureau of Investigation-Minneapolis Field Office made the announcement.
John Kelsey Gammell was sentenced to serve 180 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright of the District of Minnesota. Restitution to the victims of his computer attacks will be determined at a later date. Gammell pleaded guilty on Jan. 17, to one count of conspiracy to cause intentional damage to a protected computer and two counts of being a felon-in-possession of a firearm.
According to admissions made in connection with his plea, from at least in or about July 2015 through in or about March 2017, Gammell engaged in a campaign of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on websites throughout the United States. A DDoS attack is a malicious attempt to disable or interrupt service to a computer or website, usually by causing large amounts of Internet traffic to be directed to the computer or website. Gammell directed DDoS attacks at a number of victims websites, including websites operated by companies he used to work for, companies that declined to hire him, competitors of his business, and websites for law enforcement agencies and courts, among others.
Gammell admitted that he caused DDoS attacks by using computer programs on his own computers, as well as by directing DDoS-for-hire companies from which he purchased services to launch the DDoS attacks. Gammell purchased subscriptions to multiple DDoS-for-hire companies, including VDoS, CStress, Inboot, Booter.xyz, and IPStresser. He initiated attacks using these DDoS-for-hire companies against dozens of victims, including but not limited to Washburn Computer Group, the Minnesota State Courts, Dakota County Technical College, Minneapolis Community and Technical College, the Hennepin County Sheriffs Office, and others. Gammell took a variety of steps to avoid detection and circumvent his victims DDoS attack mitigation efforts, such as using IP address anonymization services to mask his identity and location, using cryptocurrency in payment for DDoS-for-hire services, using multiple DDoS-for-hire services at once to amplify his attacks, using spoofed emails to conceal his conduct, and using encryption and drive-cleaning tools to conceal digital evidence of his conduct on his computers.
Read more: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/new-mexico-man-sentenced-15-years-prison-directing-computer-attacks-against-websites-dozens
pecosbob
(7,543 posts)Last edited Thu May 17, 2018, 09:24 PM - Edit history (2)
I can imagine the difficulty involved. The mention of crypto-currency leads me to believe these companies operate on the dark web.
That is some industrial strength assholery there.
Snackshack
(2,541 posts)This seems weird. I am guessing most of the time is coming from the felon in possession of a firearm charge. Because if it is for the DDoS attacks how is it that the DDoS company for hire is not going with him?
Stryst
(714 posts)They usually market themselves as "stress test" services, or "security verification" (aka White Hat hacking to test security systems).
Here's a little about it
https://www.corero.com/blog/855-the-new-face-of-ddos-for-hire-services-.html