The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Superior Court judge, 3 others charged in hacking case enter not guilty pleas

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

All four defendants charged in Gwinnett County’s convoluted courthouse hacking saga entered not guilty pleas Thursday after- noon.

Each of the defendants — including sitting Superior Court Judge Kathryn Schrader and DragonCon co-founder Ed Kramer — were present for a brief arraignmen­t hearing, scat- tered across the courtroom gallery as attorneys spoke on their behalf.

Their not guilty pleas mean the case against them will move forward. The next hearing in the case is sched- uled for Nov. 7.

Schrader, Kramer, private investigat­or T.J. Ward and another man named Frank Karic were all indicted last month, charged with three counts apiece of felony computer trespass. They’re accused of unlawfully accessing, interferin­g with and removing data from the Gwinnett County com- puter network.

The case is a complex one.

According to court documents and previous state- ments made by authoritie­s, Schrader — who has been a judge on Gwinnett’s highest court since 2012 — hired Ward in February because she feared someone was trying to hack into her work computer. The judge reportedly suspected that the would-be hacker was Gwin- nett County District Attorney Danny Porter.

It remains unclear why Schrader thought as much. Porter has vehemently denied the allegation.

After he was hired, Ward allegedly tasked Karic with installing a WireShark monitoring device on Schrader’s work computer.

Ward then reportedly employed Kramer — a convicted sex offender who has worked as a computer forensic analyst — to keep tabs on the activity.

All of that came to light following Kramer’s unrelated Feb. 26 arrest for allegedly taking a photo of a young child at a Lawrencevi­lle doctor’s office. Investigat­ors from Lawrencevi­lle police and Porter’s office were doing an initial search of Kramer’s home computer when they reportedly found a folder labeled with Schrad- er’s name.

Because Schrader’s orig- inal hacking fears involved him, Porter then turned the hacking investigat­ion over to the GBI.

A Gwinnett grand jury handed up an indictment charging Schrader, Kramer, Ward and Karic on Sept. 18.

GBI investigat­ors are still digging through the tera- bytes of data on Kramer’s computer and it could still be months before they complete the investigat­ion. But their work has already led to additional charges against Kramer, who co-founded the popular Atlanta sci-fi convention DragonCon but has not been directly involved for years.

Less than two weeks ago, the GBI charged Kramer with a new count of possession of child pornograph­y after reportedly finding several images among the files being extracted from his computer. On Wednesday, prosecutor­s secured a correspond­ing indictment.

Schrader, meanwhile, stopped handling criminal cases brought by Porter’s office in April, when the district attorney filed a motion questionin­g her capacity to be impartial. But she had continued presiding over civil cases.

The judge’s status is currently being reviewed by Georgia’s Judicial Qualificat­ions Council, which will decide if she should continue on the bench while her own criminal case is ongoing.

 ??  ?? Ed Kramer
Ed Kramer
 ??  ?? T.J. Ward
T.J. Ward
 ??  ?? Frank Karic
Frank Karic
 ??  ?? Kathryn Schrader
Kathryn Schrader

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