The Asian Age

Hacker’s case now extraditio­n battle between US and Russia

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ARussian man hacked three US technology companies, potentiall­y compromisi­ng personal details of more than 100 million users.

The Russian man on Friday pleaded not guilty to charges he hacked three US technology companies, including LinkedIn, after being extradited from the Czech Republic.

Yevgeniy Nikulin, 30, of Moscow, entered his plea in the US district court in San Francisco, after having fought his extraditio­n following his 2016 arrest in Prague.

His case had turned into a battle over whether he should be sent to the United States or Russia, where a Moscow court had in November 2016 issued an arrest warrant for his alleged theft seven years earlier of $ 3,450 via a site called Webmoney.

The US Department of Justice accused Mr Nikulin of illegally accessing computers belonging to US- based social media firms LinkedIn, Dropbox and Formspring in 2012, including by using the credential­s of LinkedIn and Formspring employees.

LinkedIn, now owned by Microsoft Corp, has said the case was related to a breach that might have compromise­d informatio­n of at least 100 million users. “Computer hacking is not just a crime, it is a direct threat to the security and privacy of Americans,” US attorney general Jeff Sessions said in a statement. “This is deeply troubling behaviour once again emanating from Russia,” he continued. “We will not tolerate criminal cyber- attacks and will make it a priority to investigat­e and prosecute these crimes, regardless of the country where they originate.”

Mr Nikulin faces nine criminal counts, including causing damage to a protected computer and aggravated identity theft.

A federal public defender representi­ng him did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Mr Nikulin has denied wrongdoing in comments to Czech media.

The decision by Czech justice minister Robert Pelikan to extradite Nikulin defied Russia, which had also sought his extraditio­n. Courts in the Czech Republic, a US ally and part of the European Union, had said extraditio­n to both countries was permissibl­e, and the decision was up to Mr Pelikan. Prime Minister Andrej Babis has said he favoured extraditio­n to

Yevgeniy Nikulin, 30, of Moscow, entered his plea in the US district court in San Francisco, after having fought his extraditio­n following his 2016 arrest in Prague The US Department of Justice accused Mr Nikulin of illegally accessing computers belonging to US- based social media firms LinkedIn, Dropbox and Formspring

◗ ◗ the United States, but Mr Pelikan said President Milos Zeman, who often takes a pro- Russian stance, had urged extraditio­n to Russia.

“It was apparent that the United States requested extraditio­n for a suspicion of very serious criminal activity, which was not the case of the Russian request,” Mr Pelikan said.

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Yevginiy Nikulin
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