На информационном ресурсе применяются рекомендательные технологии (информационные технологии предоставления информации на основе сбора, систематизации и анализа сведений, относящихся к предпочтениям пользователей сети "Интернет", находящихся на территории Российской Федерации)

Politico

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Ex-aide pleads guilty in Senate hacking case


A former Senate staffer has pleaded guilty to aiding computer hacking and attempted evidence tampering for helping a fired co-worker enter a Senate office at night and wiping down computers so the colleague wouldn’t be caught.

Samantha Davis, 24, a former staff assistant to Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), appeared in U.

S. District Court just a few blocks from the Capitol on Tuesday afternoon to admit to two misdemeanor crimes for her role in events that culminated in the release of personal information of Republican senators backing the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.

During the hourlong hearing, there was no indication that Davis was aware of or involved in the doxing carried out by the fired Hassan aide, Jackson Cosko, 28. However, Davis admitted that she gave Cosko keys to Hassan’s office on one occasion, knowing that he was tampering with the computers in the office.

Davis also acknowledged that she noticed on several occasions that Cosko had taken the keys from her purse and she did not report it. She also admitted that she lied to investigators the first two times she was interviewed about intrusions at Hassan’s office.

Last month, Judge Thomas Hogan gave Cosko a stern sentence — four years in prison — for breaking into Senate computers and releasing home addresses and phone numbers of Sens. Lindsey Graham, Orrin Hatch and Mike Lee on Wikipedia in retaliation for their roles in the Kavanaugh confirmation fight.

Hogan said Davis faces a maximum possible sentence of 18 months in prison.

Prosecutors have indicated they won’t seek prison time, but may ask for home confinement or that Davis spend time in a halfway house. Public defender A.J. Kramer suggested on Tuesday that he was hopeful she would get a sentence of probation.

On Tuesday, Davis stood at a courtroom lectern as Hogan detailed her admissions in an agreed statement of facts hammered out with prosecutors.

“You were good friends,” Hogan said of Davis and Cosko. “You knew he had no right to enter the office unescorted. … You were aware Mr. Cosko was angry about his termination.”

“Mr. Cosko told you to wipe down all the computer keyboards, the computer mice and to unplug” equipment, the judge added. The effort failed because another staffer showed up at work early, the judge said.

There was little discussion of why Davis aided Cosko, but the judge said at one point that Cosko had loaned Davis money to cover her rent and asked for a favor in return. He called in that favor by asking her to hand over the office keys last October — the one time she admitted doing so.

After laying out those facts, Hogan asked her whether they were accurate.

“Yes,” Davis said.

Kramer said the plea agreement was the result of “lengthy negotiations.” The evidence-tampering crime Davis admitted to is actually charged as a violation of the Washington, D.C., city code and not federal law.

A spokesman for Hassan’s office said Davis worked as a staff assistant there from April 2017 until last December, when she was fired over her role in Cosko’s scheme.

Davis was poised throughout the hearing, answering Hogan’s questions in a loud, clear voice. She told the judge she is living in Wisconsin and recently got a job as a schoolteacher. “I start teaching in August,” she said.

Hogan, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, set sentencing for October 28. Kramer asked for a morning hearing so that Davis might be able to return to Wisconsin that same day. “I don’t mean to be presumptuous,” the defense attorney said.

Hogan moved another hearing to hold the sentencing that morning, but told Davis he couldn’t make any promises at this point about what her sentence would be. “We’ll see what happens,” the judge said.

Through her lawyer, Davis declined to comment following the court session on Tuesday.


Article originally published on POLITICO Magazine

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