UFO hacker is broken man, says family


Recommended Posts

A GLASGOW-BORN computer expert accused of hacking into American military systems is "distraught" as he awaits extradition to the US, his family and friends said yesterday.

The parents and girlfriend of Gary McKinnon, 42, joined supporters in London for a demonstration outside the Home Office, calling on the government to prevent him from being handed over to American authorities.

McKinnon, an unemployed systems analyst from north London, admits accessing 97 US military and Pentagon computers, but claimed he was looking for UFO files.

The US government accuses him of stealing passwords and deleting files.

McKinnon faces up to 70 years in prison if he is found guilty.

His partner, Lucy Clarke, 37, said: "He is a broken man ? he is distraught. The whole family has been living in terror."

His father, Charlie McKinnon, 63, who travelled from his Glasgow home, said: "I don't want him to go to America.

"There is no hope for him to face a fair trial ? they've made up their minds."

source

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/665786-ufo-hacker-is-broken-man-says-family/
Share on other sites

I bet he found some stuff that was so classified that the only way he'll never talk is if he's locked away. 70 years for hacking some crap computer systems with bad security, he should be working for them. the justice system today is some fus.

Of all the bad things people do, sneak-peeking into government UFO pictures is hardly a major crime.

He did nothing for money.

He did not help our 'enemies'.

Waste the tax-payers money on more important things and let this man alone.

His father, Charlie McKinnon, 63, who travelled from his Glasgow home, said: "I don't want him to go to America.

"There is no hope for him to face a fair trial ? they've made up their minds."

true or not, that's the perception the rest of the world has of the US. Maybe the whole terrorist thing didn't help much after all.

typical lethargic american government/legal system over this sorta thing. Bottom line is if he's extradited he's going to be demonized as a terrorist in the american legal systems eye and will be treated accordingly is what they're pointing out. He's admitted his crime and what he done but they are so mindless to the fact that they won't even allow him to do a justified sentence for it... they need to kill him behind bars for his crime like wtf is that about... then you can just see if he's extradited he won't get a fair trial because they are in their own country they can just fabricate evidence to their hearts content to try and prove it which is bullsh**... this sorta stuff that just hurts your head wondering wtf is this world coming to...

I think you are missing the point here.. HE HACKED into Government computers.. I don't give a rats a$$ if he was looking for UFO's or a copy of his birth certificate, he hacked into government computers. I mean come on.. how do WE know what he looked at? They also said he deleted some files...

Would you NOT be ****ed off and want to sue some person for hacking into your computer? Especially if he deleted some of your files?

I think you are missing the point here.. HE HACKED into Government computers.. I don't give a rats a$$ if he was looking for UFO's or a copy of his birth certificate, he hacked into government computers. I mean come on.. how do WE know what he looked at? They also said he deleted some files...

Would you NOT be ****ed off and want to sue some person for hacking into your computer? Especially if he deleted some of your files?

agreed. The man is 42, he is more than old enough to know that what he did is wrong. Nobody forced him to hack into the computers and he did it not once, not twice, but 97 times. I feel no sympathy for this man because now that he's been caught he wants to cry a river, should have thought about that when he committed the crime.

I think you are missing the point here.. HE HACKED into Government computers.. I don't give a rats a$$ if he was looking for UFO's or a copy of his birth certificate, he hacked into government computers. I mean come on.. how do WE know what he looked at? They also said he deleted some files...

Would you NOT be ****ed off and want to sue some person for hacking into your computer? Especially if he deleted some of your files?

yes i'd be ****ed, would i want the person responsible to be tried as a terrorist? no.

He broke the law but the punishment seems quite heavy-handed.

Makes you wonder if all he saw really was UFO-related. For all we know, the security services know exactly what he saw and that's the reason for the heavy-handedness.

thats the point, he isn't being asked to be let off etc, he's accepting a punishment but not one from the 'ZOMG HE'S A TERRORIST!!!!!' style US

Don't do the crime if you can't do the time.

I have to wonder if he really did understand what he was doing was wrong. I say that because he was dumb enough to hack into US Government computers, let alone 97 times, did he really not think he would be caught? -_-

I don't see why they are surprised he's being extradited, what did they think was going to happen? I'm just totally confused about what he expected to happen. I, at least, hope he saw something worthwhile to make the whole thing not a waste.

I would think they are classifying him as a "cyberterrorist" instead of your stereotypical suicide bomber terrorist. Sure his intent wasn't malicious(or at least I guess it wasn't), but hacking into computers and deleting files? We don't even know what he deleted, it could have been something important.

Edited by Travis959
I think you are missing the point here.. HE HACKED into Government computers.. I don't give a rats a$$ if he was looking for UFO's or a copy of his birth certificate, he hacked into government computers. I mean come on.. how do WE know what he looked at? They also said he deleted some files...

Would you NOT be ****ed off and want to sue some person for hacking into your computer? Especially if he deleted some of your files?

Oh yeah definitely if that's what had happened but put yourself in his shoes for a moment and take time to understand the problem here. His LIFE is on the line here would that not cause you to speak the truth and should he have deleted files or found something and ended up in this situation don't you think he would do an eye for an eye and leak what he found and deleted if he done anything if they are going to kill him over it ? He's explained it all he done in detail none of it's worth taking anybodies life over except the legal system in america feels he should be killed for their own relaxed security and fabricate that he deleted files or whatever to cover their ass from accepting they were wrong and what best way to cover you from being wrong then by killing the purpetrator doesn't this sound almost like police brutality and you say this is ok... that's just wrong. The point here is they are going to put him behind bars until he's dead for their own mistakes and lack of integrity over a crime which i'm not saying is wrong but punishment is not justified and in their eyes and abilitys the claims are fabricated for the above reasons.

well, he should have been out looking for a job...and besides? don't they have UFO's in the UK..or is that just Trolls and Knomes...LOL

besides, I doubt if he will even get close to 70 years. I'm sure Gordon Brown or your Queen will work something out.

Edited by jwjw1
well, he should have been out looking for a job...and besides? don't they have UFO's in the UK..or is that just Trolls and Knomes...LOL

besides, I doubt if he will even get close to 70 years. I'm sure Gordon Brown or your Queen will work something out. Might even work for your Government Computer Security....like at least add a 'password' for Idenity Collections.

In an ideal world that would be possible but trying to make compromises with the US demands ends up leaving your country at odds like russia atm so that's why none of these departments or people will help protect him because of political preassure.

Hacking into US government computers is not my idea of a good thing to do :|

I agree, but at the sametime the security on those computers was pure CRAP. If the stuff on those computers were that classified, wouldn't you expect the united states government to protect those computers?

The fact of the matter is that they didn't protect them. The guy commited a crime, but bringing him to the US to face a justice system that already made up it's mind and will impose an exagerated sentence is not good either.

The way I see it, it's the people in charge of security in those government facilities that should be in trial for sucking at their jobs.

I don't give a **** if the security was crap. If I leave my house unlocked and you go in and steal something, that's stealing. I don't care if you say that all you wanted to take from me was a penny. You stole. This guy can go straight to jail as far as I'm concerned.

Hopefully their govt does something and steps in. They are right, he has no chance at a fair trial here. We'll just waste tax dollars by having him here. Thats a long ass time for something thats a NON violent crime. I dont give a **** what anyone thinks either. Drug dealers, rapists get less then that, if any time at all! It makes no sense at all. UK govt should just tell us to **** off your not getting him and be done with it.

If someone gets by your security by something so simple, then thats on you. Don't go crying about it if there was something more that YOU could have done to stop it before it happened. They take our tax dollars they could have atleast put an extra layer of protection on it.

People are wondering why he got 70 years and why the government calls it "the biggest military hack of all time". Here's a list of what he apparently found:

-List of military/government officers listed as "non-terrestrial"

-Documents about a secret space program and "fleet to fleet transfers"

-Documents about alien technology

-Documents about free energy

-Documents about the known alien presence and the cover-up of it

-Documents about anti-gravity technology

-Documents that mention there's a "building 8" at NASA used for airbrushing images before they reach the public

-Documents with names of "ships". When he searched the names they didn't match any publicly known ships.

-Images of UFO's

Among other things...

Before Gary McKinnon was ever known, there have been some very credible people talking about all this same exact stuff. Former astronauts, government and military officials were coming out and talking about the same stuff years ago and still do. These people would have no reason to lie and say they're tired of the government hiding everything from the public. You can't ignore stuff like that. Especially when it's come from more than a few astronauts over the years. They've also talked about how the security around a lot of the stuff is actually very poor and how a lot of it is right out in the open because that's the best place to hide it.

There's a very good reason why they want him put away for 70 years. He saw some things and they want to make sure he never talks about it again.

My two cents worth

Edited by NightmarE D
People are wondering why he got 70 years and why the government calls it "the biggest military hack of all time". Here's a list of what he apparently found:

-List of military/government officers listed as "non-terrestrial"

-Documents about a secret space program and "fleet to fleet transfers"

-Documents about alien technology

-Documents about free energy

-Documents about the known alien presence and the cover-up of it

-Documents about anti-gravity technology

-Documents that mention there's a "building 8" at NASA used for airbrushing images before they reach the public

-Documents with names of "ships". When he searched the names they didn't match any publicly known ships.

-Images of UFO's

Among other things...

Before Gary McKinnon was ever known, there have been some very credible people talking about all this same exact stuff. Former astronauts, government and military officials were coming out and talking about the same stuff years ago and still do. These people would have no reason to lie and say they're tired of the government hiding everything from the public. You can't ignore stuff like that. Especially when it's come from more than a few astronauts over the years. They've also talked about how the security around a lot of the stuff is actually very poor and how a lot of it is right out in the open because that's the place place to hide it.

There's a very good reason why they want him put away for 70 years. He saw some things and they want to make sure he never talks about it again.

My two cents worth

Good point - putting something under the most mega extreme super ultra high security is basically waving a flag at hackers.

Whereas placing that design for free energy on standard Windows ME installation is not :p

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Calibre 9.10 by Razvan Serea  Calibre is an open source e-book library management application that enables you to manage your e-book collection, convert e-books between different formats, synchronize with popular e-book reader devices, and read your e-books with the included viewer. It acts as an e-library and also allows for format conversion, news feeds to e-book conversion, as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer. Calibre's features include: library management; format conversion (all major ebook formats); syncing to e-book reader devices; fetching news from the Web and converting it into ebook form; viewing many different e-book formats, giving you access to your book collection over the internet using just a browser. Calibre 9.10 changelog: New features Content server: A new "modern" interface with a sidebar to ease navigation Content server: When used with HTTPS allow installation as a PWA (Progressive Web App) Edit book: Saved searches: When filtering the list of saved searches match by keywords CSS parsing: Add support for CSS Level 4 selectors Cover grid: When using an image larger than the viewport as a texture scale it to fit the viewport Annotations browser: Allow restricting displayed annotations by custom annotation styles as well Edit book: Compress images: Add option to convert PNG images to JPEG or WEBP Bug fixes E-book viewer: Fix IME on Windows not working when typing in notes for highlights Conversion: Heuristics: Improve performance in some pathological cases SNB Input: Fix error on some input files Windows: fix rare crash when too many notifications are displayed at once Fix duplicating of books not duplicating value from enumerated columns when the column has a default value defined Fix a regression in 9.8 that caused errors from AI plugin providers to be silently swallowed and not displayed to user Fix CSV export invalid when exporting comments field Disallow Python templates when reading book metadata (CVE-2026-53511) Improved news sources The Week Economist Espresso Horizons Download: Calibre 9.10 | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Calibre for MacOS | 327.0 MB Download: Calibre for Linux View: Calibre Home Page | Calibre Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Malwarebytes Anti-Malware 5.6.1.257 by Razvan Serea Malwarebytes is a high performance anti-malware application that thoroughly removes even the most advanced malware and spyware. Malwarebytes version 5.**** brings comprehensive protection against today’s threat landscape so that you can finally replace your traditional antivirus. You can finally replace your traditional antivirus, thanks to a innovative and layered approach to prevent malware infections using a healthy combination of proactive and signature-less technologies. While signatures are still effective against threats like potentially unwanted programs, the majority of malware detection events already come from signature-less technologies like Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit and Malwarebytes Anti-Ransomware; that trend will only continue to grow. For many of you, this is something you already know, since over 50% of the users already run Malwarebytes as their sole security software, without any third-party antivirus. What's new in Malwarebytes 5.****: Unified user experience - For the first time, Malwarebytes now provides a consistent experience across all of our desktop and mobile products courtesy of an all new and reimagined user experience powered by a faster and more responsive UI all managed through an intuitive dashboard. Modern security and privacy integrations - Antivirus and ultra-fast VPN come together seamlessly in one easy-to-use solution. Whether you’re looking for a next-gen VPN to secure your online activity, or harnessing the power of Browser Guard to block ad trackers and scam sites, taking charge of your privacy is simple. Trusted Advisor - Empowers you with real-time insights, easy-to-read protection score and expert guidance that puts you in control over your security and privacy. Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 changelog: Features and improvements Updated the sign-in section of the My Subscription page to clarify that users can activate their subscription by signing in with their Malwarebytes account. Updated the uninstall flow to collect more meaningful insights and address customer concerns. Refreshed the app's tutorial layout for a better look and feel. Issues fixed Fixed an outdated link when clicking Take action after running a Digital Footprint Scan. Miscellaneous bug fixes. Download: Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 | 472.0 MB (Free, paid upgrade available) Links: Malwarebytes Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Yep, not sure where the surprise is here. They release a new model for every phone, every year
    • AI would probably be better utilised replacing Executives than Engineers.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Enthusiast
      Xonos went up a rank
      Enthusiast
    • Conversation Starter
      Admir earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      405
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      168
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      129
    4. 4
      neufuse
      69
    5. 5
      Xenon
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!