Anonymous Hacker Faces 16 Years In Prison For Exposing Rapists

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Anonymous hero given prison sentence for exposing rapists

An anonymous computer hacker who helped expose the brutal 2012 Steubenville gang rape of a 16-year-old girl faces up to 16-years in jail after being arrested by the FBI. 

Anonhq.com reports:

The impending 16-year jail term for 29-year-old Deric Lostutter — an anonymous computer hacker who helped expose the atrocious 2012 Steubenville gang rape of a 16-year-old girl — will move you to do something about the growing rape culture and judiciary’s failure to adequately sentence rapists.

https://twitter.com/3XT1/status/774185476529848320

The Attack

On the night of August 11, 2012 a heavily drunk high-school girl was raped at a party by several members of a local football team. The victim didn’t even know the full extent of the assault, until she saw videos and photos of the cruel act all over social media the next day. On August 22, only two players — Trent Mays and Ma’Lik Richmond — were arrested on charges of rape and kidnapping, though the kidnapping charges were later dropped.

The Expose

From a local controversy, the gang rape turned into an all-out Internet crusade and made national headlines with high-level cover-ups, prosecutors colluding with coaches, and hackers leaking the evidences that led to the conviction of the two football players.

As a leading member of hacking group KnightSec, KYAnonymous (Lostutter’s alter ego) approached fellow hacker Noah McHugh (who went by the username JustBatCat on Twitter) to hack into RollRedRoll.com (the Steubenville High School sports fan website) to expose the cover-up by school administrators, as well as reveal the identities of other high-schoolers, as seen in the videos circulated on social media.




Between December 21 and December 25, 2012, the duo hacked RollRedRoll.com, posted a video showing several of its students joking about the rape victim – referring to her as “the dead girl” – and threatened to disclose details of the school faculty members and parents involved in covering up the gang rape, if the “rape crew” didn’t come forward and apologize.

After their video brought the Steubenville rape to the national attention, social media posts along with text messages, Smartphone videos and photos, and eye witnesses’ testimony provided enough evidence against the rapists.

On March 17, 2013, Mays and Richmond were convicted of the rape of a minor; while Richmond was back to playing football a few days after serving only 10 months out of a one-year sentence in a juvenile detention facility, Mays became the star quarterback at Ohio’s Hocking College after spending just two years behind bars.

https://twitter.com/YaStotler/status/774098076667478017

The Indictment  

Instead of thanking Lostutter for exposing the rapists, the FBI raided his home and arrested him in April 2013. After pleading not guilty, Lostutter was released on supervised release while awaiting trial. In July 2016, he was indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly “conspiring to access an online account to draw attention to a 2012 high-school rape case in Ohio.”

The four-count indictment charged Lostutter with three counts of unauthorized access of a computer affecting interstate communication to commit an invasion of privacy and libel, and one count of making a false statement to the FBI.

Tor Ekeland, Lostutter’s attorney, says he was surprised that an indictment came down three years after Lostutter’s home was raided by the FBI.

“I don’t understand why they are prosecuting somebody who basically helped expose the rape of a minor… This is not a situation where somebody, you know, hacked a hospital or took down a nuclear power plant.  This was an act of political protest about the rape of a 16-year-old girl.”

Earlier, McHugh pled guilty and admitted to hacking RollRedRoll.com. But on September 7, Lostutter pleaded not guilty to four felony counts. While his trial is scheduled to begin November 8, he faces up to 16 years in prison — five years for three hacking counts, and another year for lying to the FBI — if convicted.

“You get 16 years for forcibly entering your way into a computer, but you get one year for forcibly entering your way into a woman. I think that’s the precedent the government is setting here.”

6 Comments

  1. Well. Can someone local to the situation identify the name and office location of the US Attorney prosecuting this case?  What does the district’s Congressional representative, and Ohio’s two Senators, have to say about this? Public pressure. and lots of it, must be brought to bear against those trying to prosecute. How much does it cost to purchase radio or TV time for soundbites linking the prosecutor’s name with the words RAPE and RAPIST, over and over again? How much for billboards? Public pressure. Public shaming. It works.  

  2. We HAVE to take our court system down! Dismantle it from the top down or we will have much more of this and worse. This is beyond wrong. This young man traced down criminals and he is going to prison. We have to stop this and now! 

  3. That’s messed up. I thank Deric Lostutter and Noah McHugh for what they did. Deric deserves a medal, not a jail sentence. And those rapists, should be in prison. So sick of rapists getting away with rape.

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