US hacker pleads guilty, faces 17-25 years

BOSTON, (Reuters Life!) – A 28-year-old college  dropout pleaded guilty yesterday to charges that he stole tens  of millions of payment card numbers by breaking into corporate  computer systems.

Albert Gonzalez told a federal judge in Boston that he  engineered electronic heists at companies including payment  card processor Heartland Payment Systems, 7-Eleven Inc and the  Hannaford chain of New England grocery stores.

Gonzalez has previously pleaded guilty to computer  break-ins at retailers TJX Cos Inc, BJ’s Wholesale Club Inc and  Barnes & Noble.

He faces 17 to 25 years in prison when he is sentenced in  March in the largest case of identity theft in U.S. history.  The two judges responsible for doling out the punishment have  considerable leeway in sentencing.

“You face a considerable amount of time in jail as a result  of your plea,” U.S. district Judge Douglas Woodlock told  Gonzalez. “All aspects of your life are to be affected.”

Gonzalez’s attorney, Martin Weinberg, has asked for the  judges to be lenient, saying his client suffers from Internet  addiction, drug abuse and symptoms of a mild form of autism  known as Asperger syndrome.

Gonzalez, who appeared in court wearing a beige prison  uniform, told the judge that he had abused alcohol and illegal  drugs for years. He mentioned marijuana, cocaine, LSD, ketamine  and hallucinogenic mushrooms.

“It’s one of the reasons to explain why a young man in his  20s did these things,” Weinberg said.
A psychiatrist hired by Gonzalez has told the court that  the hacker’s criminal behavior “was consistent with the  description of the Asperger’s disorder.” Prosecutors have  petitioned the court to perform their own psychiatric  evaluation of Gonzalez.

Weinberg has sought to block that request, saying it is  unprecedented to conduct a psychiatric evaluation prior to  sentencing.