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Free or fair trial for Gary McKinnon: Case Update PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 31 May 2007

!-Updated-! Gary McKinnon's House of Lords appeal hearing date was set provisionally for 19th June 2008. Exopolitics UK just spoke to Gary and he says the hearing date has been moved to the 16th June.

Please see:  latest appeal | Misc Media | Extradition

Gary also pointed out that although the House of Lords hearing is seen as the 'last point' for the extradition decision, should it be refused and either the case 'dropped' on the UK side or a local court option be scheduled, the US prosecutors can indeed contest the Lords' decision. This would result in another UK based hearing we presume or even European Court of Human Rights

Exopolitics UK will keep readers posted on any future developments. In addition we are thankful to those who attended the Beyond Knowledge event recently who did an auction and collection for Gary for which he passes on his thanks. Gary kindly suggested that a contribution of the total raised be given to the Uk Exopolitics Initiative which, if agreed upon, will help towards ongoing lobbying of politicians and media in this area. We have previously contacted members of Parliament on this issue and are in the process of writing to possible supportive members of the upper chamber.

Continued...

In the UFOlogical field, some commentators including Whitley Strieber and Alfred Webre have pointed out the fact that Gary was essentially "allowed" to access these high-level networks and "locate" the evidence he found. Whitley even declared he thought the spreadsheet data with "non-terrestrial officers" and "fleet-to-fleet" transfers [the latter ship names were researched by Gary and found not to be usual, naval, sea-going vessels] if not a set-up was perhaps some Pentagon staff members on-line gaming details. 

In response to this Gary laughed and suggested that the honeypot idea was just not feasible given the vast array of other foreign IP addresses he saw logged in and scanning the networks when he was live and doing much the same. His take is pretty straight forward: the Pentagon, Navy and NASA networks were all drastically unsecured and it was simple random bad-luck he was located and is now a being made a scape-goat for their embarrassment. 

The main issue Gary's case has got caught up in is of course the growing, draconian anti-terror laws and atmosphere. Gary repeated the feedback he'd had from some areas of US security personnel who "want to see him fry" in a US jail. The seriousness of his situation should Britain clear the route to a US trial should not be underestimated. It is likely Gary will be prosecuted under recent anti-terror laws which allow for a closed military hearing as current;y being done in Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

It's worth pointing out that the broader claims of many whistle-blowers, witnesses and Gary himself have recently been validated by astounding footage taken by a UK video astronomer

For a different take on the story of Gary McKinnon -  check out the audio - "Gary McKinnon Exo-Ordinary Rendition." There is also a BBC video interview in our media objects section.

Black Vault Wiki entry on this case and its history: http://www.theblackvault.com/wiki/index.php/Gary_McKinnon
 

Gary McKinnon, the man accused of hacking into Pentagon and Nasa computers from a flat in north London, heard yesterday that he had won the right to have his case against extradition to the US heard by the House of Lords. The agreement by the law lords to listen to arguments that the US authorities acted in an "oppressive" and "arbitrary" manner is the first step in what Mr McKinnon and his legal team hope will be an end to extradition proceedings which began in 2004. He has always argued that, because the alleged offences took place in the UK, that is where he should stand trial. No date has been set for the House of Lords hearing and he remains on bail.

"Gary McKinnon is delighted to learn of this important development," said his barrister, Ben Cooper of Charter chambers, last night.
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,2138351,00.html

 

Previous News:

High Court certifies two points of law for the House of Lords to consider in the Gary McKinnon extradition to the USA case. 

The Administrative Court (one of the High Courts) has certified two questions on points of law, for the House of Lords (the highest Court in the the United Kingdom) to consider. The House of Lords is not automatically bound to consider this final appeal.

We are pleased to report that the Administrative Court have certified two questions of being of public importance in the case of Gary McKinnon. These questions relate to the diplomatic note confirming that Mr McKinnon will not be treated as a terrorist under Military Order No. 1 by the American Government and secondly the conduct of the American Government in offering Mr. McKinnon a plea bargain but only on the basis that if he did not accept it he would subsequently not be repatriated if extradited to the USA.    We will now be applying for leave to the House of Lords for these points to be argued in full.    Kaim Todner LLP
 

 

 

Profile: Gary McKinnon
http://www.scmagazine.com/uk/news/article/661431/profile-gary-mckinnon/

Being public enemy number one is a lot more mundane than you might think, the notorious hacker tells Paul Fisher as he awaits extradition.


It's a miserable, cold day and the rain has become persistent. Standing at the entrance to Wood Green tube station, I'm waiting to meet Gary McKinnon, the man US prosecutors claim is responsible for the biggest military hack of all time.


That sounds like an honour, but it isn't. For the man who arrives in jeans, trainers and a baggy black anorak on the other side of the station entrance it's part of a story that threatens to take away his liberty and land him in an American prison for the rest of his life.


The case surrounding McKinnon has been dragging on for more than five years. What is widely known is that he allegedly hacked into a number of US military and NASA computers in 2001 and 2002. He was arrested by detectives from the now-defunct high-tech crime unit after an indictment was issued by US authorities. Nothing much happened for three years, and McKinnon became a bit of a celebrity in the hacking community - although he's keen to point out that he doesn't see himself as any kind of anti-hero.


Then the extradition threat that had been in the background since 2002 suddenly became very real in 2005, when the home secretary cleared the way. Various appeals followed, but since the start of this year it began to feel that time was running out for the former system administrator. His appeal to have the extradition stopped was turned down by the High Court in April, and his hopes now rest with the House of Lords. But the procedure is not encouraging; the High Court has to appeal on his behalf and may refuse to do so. McKinnon now has to wait and see if he gets a call from the High Court. "It could take ages," he sighs. And even then his fate rests with three unnamed law lords, who may or may not make themselves fully aware of the facts in the case.


As we sit down to talk in a coffee shop, he tells me that waiting around is something he has become quite good at over the past few years. Unable to work, he has to fill his time on the £53.14 a week he gets in benefits. Under the terms of his bail he is banned from using the internet, which, he says was annoying at first, but he has got used to it. Then there is the weekly chore of signing on at Wood Green police station to prove he hasn't fled the country. Not that the life of a fugitive appeals. "I wouldn't want to flee. Anyway, my passport has been taken away - even though it ran out in 1982. I've never really been much of a traveller, I always preferred camping in the UK."


The teenage McKinnon was more interested in science fiction and UFOs - an interest that has never left him and is largely responsible for his current predicament. It was his quest for evidence of UFO activity that led him to poke around in NASA and US military computers. He claims that the existence of UFOs is kept secret by a process of ridicule. "Yet, some of the world's greatest problems could be solved. The oil-based economy would be out the window," he says. He really does believe this, too.


Meeting McKinnon you quickly realise that he hardly fits the bill as far as the quasi-terrorist persona the US seem to have created for him. He's quietly spoken and polite. He seems relaxed, sipping his tea, yet it's not hard to imagine the stress he must be under. The beta-blockers his GP prescribed have helped, he admits.
He says he has always been quite good at compartmentalising problems in his mind, although I wonder, when faced with a 70-year prison sentence, how much of a compartment that must take up. "It prays on my mind, but I try to maintain a fair bit of optimism, although my core of confidence and wellbeing, that has been eroded," he says.


In some ways, McKinnon is unlucky. He happened to be active around the time of 9/11 and its aftermath. A press release issued in December 2002 by a prosecuting US attorney talks of the "grave intrusion into a vital military computer system at a time when we, as a nation, had to summon all our defenses against further attack". There is also the matter of the "calling cards" that he is alleged to have left criticising US policy. This can't have helped his case?


"I might have left messages criticising their security, sometimes an anti-US government policy message," he admits. But nothing, he insists, to do with the country or its people. "I've been there, had a great time. I'm not anti-American. I'm just anti-US foreign policy over successive governments." And the alleged damage? "Either they invented that or someone else did it. I would love to see the evidence of the damage, what physical form that took," he says.


He's not alone in this. Other security experts I spoke to have also expressed a degree of scepticism at the US government's damage estimates - it's extremely difficult to prove. Plus there's the issue, often overlooked, at the ease with which McKinnon managed to access so many military-grade systems with off-the-shelf hacking tools. Others in the security community have questioned why no one has been brought to book for this. Some of his supporters say that it is the system administrators that should be tried and prosecuted, he says.


Has the Free Gary McKinnon website helped or hindered his cause? "It's definitely helped. In terms of support I've gotten, it gives a warm feeling." he tells me. He likes the fact that some US military personnel have left abusive messages - with their IP addresses traceable.


If his final appeals fail, then this, he says, is what will happen. It's almost worthy of Kafka. He will get a letter telling him to report to Heathrow airport, where he will be met by two US marshals. He will be cuffed, put into leg irons and taken on to a plane. This will be done by foreign police officers on British soil to a British citizen.


And when he gets to the US, he may have to wait up to two years for his case to come to trial - in jail. In an interview with The Guardian in 2005, he spoke of his terror at the prospect, so bad that he could hardly control his legs as he walked down the road or sleep at night. Now he says, it's not as bad, the fear comes and goes.


He has support from the US as well, especially from the UFO community, who post onto the website. "Dan Aykroyd mentioned me on a US chat show, with David Sereda," he tells me with pride.


He believes that he is caught between two conflicting schools of thought in the US. One is that he has embarrassed the US government and it might be best if the whole thing was forgotten, while others feel he should be made an example of. So what does he think should happen to him? "If I am completely neutral, I would say that I should be tried, but tried in the UK. If I am not, I would say that I would like the whole case to be dropped, as since 2002 my life has been a sentence in itself," he says.


As far as McKinnon is concerned, the UK government has not covered itself in glory over this affair. He feels an affinity with the NatWest Three, extradited to the US for different reasons, but subject to what many people feel is a one-sided extradition treaty. He feels very let down by home secretary John Reid.
"I realised when he was speaking that he understood very little of the US/UK extradition agreement. He was given an A4 brief. I understand more than he does," he says. He claims that someone very senior in the Crown Prosecution Service, told him that someone "very high up" had gone over Reid's head to ensure he would be extradited.


So now his hopes of remaining in the UK rest with the High Court and three unknown Law Lords who will look at his appeal. What would he say to them? "Please review the US/UK extradition treaty in its entirety - it's very definitely one-sided. The US has an agreement with 119 countries. The UK is the only one that will hand over its own citizens without evidence," he says. And if, and it's a big if, he is acquitted and gets his life back, he promises he would devote much of his time to getting that treaty changed.

 

THE CASE AGAINST MCKINNON


In its indictment, the US government charges seven counts of fraud and related activity that took place between February 2001 and March 2002. Gary McKinnon is accused of illegally accessing 98 computers, variously belonging to the US army, navy, air force, NASA, Department of Defense and a number of private companies.


On each count, McKinnon faces a maximum sentence of ten years in prison and a $250,000 fine. According to the US Department of Justice, he is responsible for "an estimated loss of approximately $900,000 (£454,000)".


However, the exact level of damage caused is one of the most controversial points in the case against McKinnon. Different figures are routinely bandied about by the press, and the wording of the original indictment is ambiguous; it does not state the actual levels of damage for each of the computers McKinnon is said to have accessed and damaged.


According to the Free Gary McKinnon website (freegary.org.uk/), he admits accessing NASA computers as part of his search for evidence of extra-terrestrial life, but denies deliberately causing any damage.
McKinnon now faces extradition to the US to face these charges. If found guilty, he is effectively looking at life imprisonment. At the time of writing, he is waiting to hear whether his application of appeal to the House of Lords against the extradition has been approved by the High Court.



 

» 6 Comments
6"nobody"
at Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:05by John
Maybe pointing out more of the injustices done to many of our own innocents let alone our accused would do more to sway their opinion ?A must see at  
( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0GeVdrPx Sw ) I am against unjust treatment in the system and they will hang him high and lay it on him just to make an example out of this boy just for messing with the Government & their taboo subject esp if their was something he found out .
5"Experiencer"
at Tuesday, 03 June 2008 22:01by Paul Michael Shishis
Hang in Brother,HELP IS ON THE WAY **** LIGHT OF TRUTH WILL SCURRY THE VEil of EVil
4Comment
at Monday, 02 June 2008 04:10by Sylvain Pimpare
Gary should be treated as a hero not a criminal. He try wrightfully to disclosure illegal hiden informations that really belong to the entire Human species. Its the governement that should be in trial for Crime agaisnt Humanity.
3Comment
at Tuesday, 27 May 2008 08:44by boris
What people must never loose sight of is the fact that Gary, in exposing the lies and deceipt of these shadow government operatives, with regards to the alien presence etc, should be held in high esteem. And under no circumstances should he be handed over like a lamb to the slaughter to the American Government. I agree with jon when he says that if there is any justice left in our legal system then he should be tried here.
2"Lords"
at Friday, 16 May 2008 17:01by davID
All this depends on the House of Lords and how well informed they are on the issue. 
 
The thing is America has ways and means of applying "diplomatic" pressure which may not always be obvious to the rest of us - it could be this factor that swings the issue against Gary but let's hope for some rational thought and conclusion. 
 
david, Exo uk 
--
1"good luck"
at Friday, 16 May 2008 01:51by Jon MArsh
I have kept an eye on this case although i am not really into the UFO issue - this is more about human rights and IF there is any justice left in the UK legal system they will NOT extradite Gary McKinnon into the arms of pissed-off, gloating and embarrassed American military types.
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