Daily Times (Primos, PA)

US charges Swiss ‘hacktivist’ for data theft and leaks

- By Matt O’brien

The Justice Department has charged a Swiss hacker with computer intrusion and identity theft, just over a week after the hacker embarrasse­d a U.S. securityca­mera startup and its clients by showing how easy it was to spy on the cameras watching over hospitals, schools and corporate offices.

An indictment against 21-year-old Tillie Kottmann was brought Thursday by a grand jury in the Seattle-based Western District of Washington.

Federal prosecutor­s said Thursday that Kottmann, of Lucerne, Switzerlan­d, was initially charged in September. The range of allegation­s date back to 2019 and involve the alleged theft of credential­s and data and publishing source code and proprietar­y informatio­n from more than 100 entities, including companies and government agencies.

Kottmann has described the most recent leak of camera footage taken from customers of California security-camera provider Verkada as part of a “hacktivist” cause of exposing the dangers of mass surveillan­ce. Kottmann told The Associated Press in an online chat last week that they found the credential­s needed to enter the site exposed on the open internet.

In conversati­ons with other reporters last year, Kottmann, who uses they/ them pronouns, said data they obtained and posted online had been exposed by poor security practices and they sought to shame organizati­ons into buttoning up their networks.

Acting U.S. Attorney Tessa Gorman rejected that approach in a statement Thursday.

“These actions can increase vulnerabil­ities for everyone from large corporatio­ns to individual consumers,” Gorman wrote. “Wrapping oneself in an allegedly altruistic motive does not remove the criminal stench from such intrusion, theft, and fraud.”

Kottmann didn’t return an online request for comment. Swiss lawyer Marcel Bosonnet said he is representi­ng Kottmann but declined further comment Friday.

Bosonnet at one time represente­d Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor who was charged in 2013 with disclosing details of highly classified government surveillan­ce programs. Snowden had considered seeking asylum in Switzerlan­d.

Swiss authoritie­s said they had raided Kottmann’s home in Lucerne late last week at the request of U.S. authoritie­s. Prosecutor­s said the FBI recently seized a website domain that Kottmann used to publish hacked data online.

It’s not clear if U.S. prosecutor­s will to try to extradite Kottmann, who remains in Lucerne and was notified of the pending charges. Swiss law limits certain forms of extraditio­n, especially when the charges could be prosecuted in local courts. The public prosecutor’s office in Lucerne declined comment Friday, deferring to U.S. authoritie­s.

Kottmann expressed confidence in the online chat with the AP last week that the U.S. “cannot extradite me even though they know exactly who I am.”

 ?? TED S. WARREN - THE AP ?? In this 2020 file photo, a security camera is shown on the second floor of a row of rooms at a motel in Kent, Wash.
TED S. WARREN - THE AP In this 2020 file photo, a security camera is shown on the second floor of a row of rooms at a motel in Kent, Wash.

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