Guilty Plea To Attack on Scientology Website
New Jersey Man Pleads Guilty To Launching Attack That
Shut Down Church Of Scientology Websites
NEWARK, New
Jersey - A New Jersey man pleaded guilty today to his role
in a cyber attack on Church of Scientology websites in
January 2008 that rendered the websites unavailable.
Dmitriy Guzner, 19, of Verona, New Jersey, pleaded guilty to computer hacking charges originally filed in the Los Angeles for his role in the distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack against the Scientology websites. A DDOS attack occurs where a large amount of malicious Internet traffic is directed at website or a set of websites. The target websites are unable to handle the high volume of Inter traffic and therefore become unavailable to legitimate users.
According to the criminal information filed last year in United States District Court in Los Angeles, Guzner participated in the attack because he considered himself a member of an underground group called "Anonymous," a group that has led protests against the Church of Scientology at various locations across the country
Guzner is scheduled
to be sentenced by the United States District Judge Joseph
A. Greenaway Jr. on August 24. As a result of today's guilty
plea, Guzner faces a statutory maximum penalty of 10 years
in federal prison.
This case was investigated by the Los
Angeles Field Officer Electronic Crimes Task Force, which
included the United States Secret Service, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and the Los Angeles Police
Department.
The New York Field Officer Electronic Crimes Task Force, and the Newark Field Officer and the New Haven Resident Office of United States Secret Service assisted in the investigation.
ENDS