The Sunday Telegraph

Bognor teenager faces extraditio­n over Twitter ‘hacking’ of celebritie­s

Nineteen-year-old charged by US department of justice after last month’s Bitcoin cyber scam

- By Danielle Sheridan POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT and Ellie Zolfaghari­fard TECHNOLOGY NEWS EDITOR

A BRITISH teenager charged with hacking Twitter had his home searched by the National Crime Agency and is likely to face extraditio­n to the US, The

Sunday Telegraph can reveal. Mason Sheppard, a 19-year-old from Bognor Regis, was one of three people charged by the US Department of Justice on Friday night over an alleged cyber scam that saw the accounts of various celebritie­s hijacked last month.

Sources told The Telegraph that Mr Sheppard, who is said to go by the code name “Chaewon”, could be extradited if prosecutor­s in the US put in a request. However, he has not been arrested by officers in Britain, who are assisting in their investigat­ion.

Mr Sheppard is in a long line of British people accused of hacking who have been at risk of extraditio­n. Gary McKinnon, from Glasgow, who in 2002 was accused of perpetrati­ng the “biggest military computer hack of all time”, and Laurie Love, from Suffolk, who was arrested in 2013 after being accused of stealing data from US agencies including the FBI, the Federal Reserve and Nasa, both avoided being extradited, the latter after a High Court appeal in 2018.

Mr Sheppard has been charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and the intentiona­l access of a protected computer.

Among the accounts hijacked last month included those of Barack Obama, the former US president, Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, Jeff Bezos, Amazon owner, Kanye West, the rapper, and his wife, Kim Kardashian.

The tweets offered to send $2,000 (£1,500) for every $1,000 (£750) sent to an anonymous Bitcoin address. One tweet from Bill Gates’s account read: “Everyone is asking me to give back. You send $1,000, I send you back $2,000.”

The NCA confirmed on Friday it had supported the US investigat­ion and searched a property in West Sussex with officers from Serocu, a collaborat­ion between the police forces of Hampshire, Surrey, Sussex and the Thames that focuses on organised crime in the South East.

A government source said there was “always the possibilit­y” the US could put in an extraditio­n request, but would not confirm if one had been made.

However, Prof Alan Woodward, a cyber security expert at Surrey University, said that if he were Mr Sheppard he “would be slightly worried”. “The Americans will issue a legal assistance warrant,” he said. “In this case, they did actually not just break in, but they then tried to use it for a criminal scam. They walked away with thousands of pounds … they were not trivial sums of money. I suspect that the British law enforcemen­t agencies will not have a great deal of sympathy with them.” According to neighbours, Mr Sheppard – who attended a state comprehens­ive school – is “a nice lad” whose father, Mark, passed away around five years ago. They added that his mother Lorraine had been bringing him up. David Anderson, the US attorney for the Northern District of California, said Mr Sheppard “faces a statutory maximum penalty of 45 years of imprisonme­nt” if convicted. According to court documents, approximat­ely 415 transfers were made to the Bitcoin address totalling more than $117,000 (£90,000). Nima Fazeli, 22, of Orlando, Florida, was charged with aiding and abetting the intentiona­l access of a protected computer. The Department of Justice said charges had also been filed against a juvenile. Graham Ivan Clark, 17, was arrested in Tampa, Florida, on Friday according to the Hillsborou­gh State Attorney’s Office. It added that Mr Clark will be prosecuted as an adult and is allegedly the “mastermind” behind the hack. Mr Anderson said: “There is a false belief within the criminal hacker community that attacks like the Twitter hack can be perpetrate­d anonymousl­y and without consequenc­es... break the law, and we will find you.”

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