A 20-year-old man accused of using thousands of hijacked computers, or “bot nets,” to damage systems and send massive amounts of spam across the Internet was arrested on Thursday in what authorities called the first such prosecution of its kind.

Jeanson James Ancheta, who prosecutors say was a well-known member of the “Botmaster Underground” — or the secret network of computer hackers skilled at bot attacks — was taken into custody after being lured to FBI offices in Los Angeles, said U.S. Attorney’s spokesman Thom Mrozek.

A bot is a program that surreptitiously installs itself on a computer and allows the hacker to control the computer. A bot net is a network of such robot computers, which can harness their collective power to do considerable damage or send out huge quantities of spam.

Mrozek said the prosecution was unique because, unlike in previous cases, Ancheta was accused of profiting from his attacks — by selling access to his “bot nets” to other hackers and planting adware — software that causes ads to pop up — into infected computers.

“Normally what we see in these cases, where people set up these bot systems to do, say, denial of service attacks, they are not doing it for profit, they are doing it for bragging rights,” he said. “This is the first case in the nation that we’re aware of where the guy was using various bot nets in order to make money for himself.”

Ancheta has been indicted on a 17-count federal indictment that charges him with conspiracy, attempted transmission of code to a protected computer, transmission of code to a government computer, accessing a protected computer to commit fraud and money laundering.

Ancheta, who was expected to make an initial court appearance late on Thursday or Friday, faces a maximum term of 50 years in prison if convicted on all counts, though federal sentencing guidelines typically call for lesser penalties.

Prosecutors did not name the companies that they said paid Ancheta and said the firms did not know any laws were broken.

Uh-huh.



  1. garym says:

    First, I’m glad they caught someone for this. Now, they need to go after the companies who condone this action by paying for these services.

    If a company purchases advertising, they want to know where their advertisements are being shown, how often they are shown, and how many people are seeing them. You can’t tell me that any company that uses his services didn’t know what they were buying.

  2. Jazzman1 says:

    It makes me sick that everytime they bust a major corporation for something BIG and highly ILLEGAL they always let them off with the “without admitting any wrongdoing” .. what the hell is that???!!!

    I KNOW they wouldn’t treat me or you like that?? And this stuff about “We didn’t know what we were doing” really takes the cake.

    Just piss in my face and tell me “its rainin” ..

  3. Jamie says:

    Wait, the FBI thought people make denial of service attacks so that they can brag to their friends?? Am I the only person who has heard of cases of people extorting money out of commercial websites with threats that they will shut down the business on key days with DoS attacks?

  4. James Hill says:

    I blame the parents. Who names their kid “Jeanson” anymore?

    James Hill

  5. Mike Voice says:

    was taken into custody after being lured to FBI offices in Los Angeles,

    WTF??

    That sounds like a whole story, in itself.

    What would it take to lure you to an FBI office?? 🙂

  6. mike cannali says:

    Calculate the sentence based on the total value of hijacked computer time, impact to all users to remove the malware and calculate the time to pay if off with minimum wage.

  7. mike cannali says:

    “…..17-count federal indictment that charges him with conspiracy, attempted transmission of code to a protected computer, transmission of code to a government computer, accessing a protected computer to commit fraud and money laundering”.

    How about espionage – sabotage of a national defense installation during wartime too


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