Aaron Swartz and Jonathan James commit suicide in different years; surprisingly the prosecution team trying them was the same.
Two
of world’s most wanted hackers had committed suicide and no one still
knows why. Aaron Swartz and Jonathan James, both hackers by profession
and most wanted by the FBI have committed suicide in face of the federal
investigation against their hacking crimes.
Interested thing is
both hackers were not connected to each other in any way but were being
tried for hacking by the same department and the case was being overseen
by the same Assistant United States Attorney Stephen Heymann. Could
this have any hand in their suicides.
Some people close to Swartz
say that it was an overzealous federal prosecution team contributed to
Aaron Swartz’s suicide. On January 6, 2011, Swartz was arrested by MIT
police on state breaking-and-entering charges, after installing a
computer in an Institute closet which he set to systematically download
academic journal articles from JSTOR. Federal prosecutors later charged
him with two counts of wire fraud and 11 violations of the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act carrying a cumulative maximum penalty of $1 million
in fines, 35 years in prison, asset forfeiture, restitution, and
supervised release.
While James, who was implicated in the largest
hack of personal identity committed suicide on May 18, 2008. Jonathan
James was found dead in his shower with a self-inflicted gunshot wound
to the head. His suicide was apparently motivated by the belief that he
would be prosecuted for crimes he had not committed. “I honestly,
honestly had nothing to do with TJX,” James wrote in his suicide note,
“I have no faith in the ‘justice’ system. Perhaps my actions today, and
this letter, will send a stronger message to the public. Either way, I
have lost control over this situation, and this is my only way to regain
control. … Remember, it’s not whether you win or lose, it’s whether I
win or lose, and sitting in jail for 20, 10, or even 5 years for a crime
I didn’t commit is not me winning. I die free.”
As said above,
both hackers were from different backgrounds and had been accused of
doing something very different. James was accused of stealing tens of
thousands of credit card numbers, while Swartz was more of a social
activist. He was an advocate of free culture and an open Internet.
The
question remains whether the over zealous prosecution somehow hammered
the fact into both James and Swartz’s mind that they would never escape
the law. Whatever the case, it seems that no one will be held
responsible for both the suicides and both the hackers deaths have been
to relegated to rather ignominious death.
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