Actress Oscar Jennifer Lawrence |
An Illinois man accused of
breaking into the Apple iCloud and Gmail accounts of celebrities to obtain
their private photos and videos has agreed to plead guilty to a felony computer hacking charge, prosecutors said on Friday.
Edward Majerczyk, 28, facing up
to five years in prison, is the second man charged in a federal investigation
into the leaks of nude photos of several Hollywood actresses, including Oscar Winner Jennifer Lawrence, in September 2014.
According to a plea agreement
signed by Majerczyk, he illegally accessed Apple iCloud and Google Gmail accounts belonging to more than 300 people, using an email "phishing"
ploy to obtain their user names and passwords.
Through this scheme, Majerczyk
was able to access full iCloud backups belonging to numerous victims, including
at least 30 celebrities, many of whom reside in the Los Angeles area, the plea
agreement stated.
"Many of these backups
contained sensitive and private photographs and videos," it said.
Under his deal with federal
prosecutors, Majerczyk, a Chicago resident, will formally plead guilty in U.S. District Court in Illinois to a felony violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles.
Actress Jennifer Lawrence |
A 36-year-old Pennsylvania man,
Ryan Collins, pleaded guilty in March to the same offense in a case stemming
from the same investigation.
Like Collins, federal
authorities said they had found no evidence linking Majerczyk to actual public
circulation of any of the photos to which he gained access.
While no victims were named in
court documents, the investigation began after Lawrence and other celebrities,
including actresses Kirsten
Dunst and Gabrielle Union and
model Kate Upton, complained in interviews about having their private photos
end up publicly disseminated online.
It was not the first time
celebrity nude photos obtained through by computer intrusions led to a criminal
prosecution.
A Florida man was sentenced in
2012 to 10 years in prison for hacking into email accounts of Scarlett
Johansson, Mila Kunis and Christina Aguilera to leak private information and
explicit photos. Pop star Taylor Swift said her Twitter and Instagram accounts
were hacked in January 2015.
More recently, a Bahamian man
in New York pleaded guilty in May to charges of hacking into celebrities' email
accounts to steal unreleased movies and television scripts. And a Filipino man
was charged last month in New Jersey with running a scheme to hack into the
bank and credit card accounts of celebrities. (Reporting by Steve Gorman;
Editing by Bernard Orr)
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