Chicago Sun-Times

‘ CELEBGATE’ CONFESSION

Chicago man admits to hacking at least 30 celebrity accounts

- BY JONSEIDEL Staff Reporter Email: jseidel@suntimes.com Twitter:@SeidelCont­ent

Edward Majerczyk hacked into the online accounts of at least 30 celebritie­s whose private photograph­s wound up online for the world to see.

But after Majerczyk, 29, admitted his role Tuesday in the infamous Hollywood scandal known as “Celebgate”— which exposed nude photograph­s of dozens of A- list celebritie­s in September 2014 and gave actress Jennifer Lawrence an anxiety attack — his attorney told reporters the South Side man is “a very private individual.”

“He screwed up and he’s moving on with his life and he looks forward to rebuilding his life as soon as this case is over with,” said Thomas Needham, Majerczyk’s defense attorney.

Majerczyk now faces a maximum of five years in prison after pleading guilty in front of U. S. District Judge Charles P. Kocoras to accessing a protected computer without authorizat­ion — and accessing the Apple iCloud and Gmail accounts of more than 300 people, including at least 30 celebritie­s.

Federal prosecutor­s have agreed to seek a prison term of no more than nine months. Majerczyk’s sentencing hearing is set for Jan. 10.

The Chicago Sun- Times first reported the FBI had raided Majerczyk’s apartment on Narraganse­tt near Midway Airport in connection with its Celebgate investigat­ion. Majerczyk told the judge Tuesday he used a trick he “had learned from another individual” to access and download sensitive photograph­s.

The feds say Majerczyk used a “phishing” scheme, sending his victims emails from addresses like “applepriva­cysecurity@icloud.com.” The emails appeared to be from the victims’ internet service providers’ security accounts and would direct the victims to a website that collected their usernames and passwords.

“Did you concentrat­e on celebritie­s?” Kocoras asked.

“Yes, your honor,” Majerczyk said.

Needham stressed in court that Majerczyk never used the photos for extortion, and the feds say there is no evidence he leaked them online. When the judge asked if Majerczyk simply sought the photograph­s for his own “personal satisfacti­on,” Needham conceded that was the case.

The feds walked out of Majerczyk’s apartment in October 2014 with several computers, a cellphone, hard drives and thumb drives, court records show. Needham told the judge Majerczyk will not be seeking the return of any of his electronic­s.

The FBI also raided a home on South Washtenaw in Brighton Park, records show, but no criminal charges appear to have been filed as a result.

Search warrant applicatio­ns filed in Chicago describe interviews with some of the victimized celebritie­s but refer to them only by their initials. Victims of the hack included Mary Elizabeth-Winstead, Kate Upton and boyfriend Justin Verlander. Some of the celebritie­s reported they’d been briefly locked out of their online accounts before the leak, records show.

Others said they received the so- called “phishing” messages described by federal prosecutor­s in Majerczyk’s case. Many said the photograph­s were meant only for their significan­t others. And one said she sent some of the 54 private leaked photograph­s to her fiance. But she said she never sent him the others — she only stored them on her phone.

Finally, anFBI agent described one interview with Lawrence, identified only as “J. L.,” that he had to stop because she became “very distraught.”

“J. L. stated she was having an anxiety attack and was visibly shaken,” the agent wrote.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, Lawrence called the leak a “sex crime.”

 ?? SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES ?? Edward Majerczyk leaves the Dirksen Federal Courthouse after pleading guilty on Tuesday to hacking celebritie­s’ online accounts.
SANTIAGO COVARRUBIA­S/ SUN- TIMES Edward Majerczyk leaves the Dirksen Federal Courthouse after pleading guilty on Tuesday to hacking celebritie­s’ online accounts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States