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The Courts Crime Education The Almighty Buck Hardware Technology

Student Used 'USB Killer' Device To Destroy $58,000 Worth of College Computers (theverge.com) 235

A former student of The College of Saint Rose in Albany, New York, has pled guilty to charges that he destroyed tens of thousands of dollars worth of campus computers using a USB device designed to instantly overwhelm and fry their circuitry. The plea was announced today by the Department of Justice, FBI, and Albany Police Department. The Verge reports: Vishwanath Akuthota, the former student, now faces up to 10 years in prison (with up to three years of supervision after release) and a fine totaling up to $250,000. He was arrested and taken into custody in North Carolina on February 22nd, just over a week after he went on a spree of inserting the "USB Killer" device into 66 of Saint Rose's computers around various locations on campus. Such devices can be easily and freely purchased online and can overload the surge protection in many PCs.

Akuthota, 27, apparently made video recordings of himself inserting the malicious USB device into the computers and said "I'm going to kill this guy" as the PCs were overloaded and permanently ruined. So it's fair to say the FBI and APD had all the evidence they needed. In total, Akuthota caused $58,471 worth of damage. As part of his guilty plea, he has agreed to pay back that amount to the college, a small private school in New York's capital city. The Verge reached out to The College of Saint Rose for a statement on today's news, but a spokesperson said the college had been asked by law enforcement to refrain from commenting.

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Student Used 'USB Killer' Device To Destroy $58,000 Worth of College Computers

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  • by DatbeDank ( 4580343 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:14PM (#58451778)

    If you're going to do something stupid or better yet illegal, don't record yourself.
    Here's a fun Q&A with him on FB: https://www.facebook.com/saint... [facebook.com]

    Sounds like he got fired and was looking for revenge! Curious what he did to deserve the firing.

    • by Highdude702 ( 4456913 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:21PM (#58451812)

      My first thought was "HAHAHAHAHAHA Dumb fuck". Then I actually thought about it, and I laughed harder... So yea and he made it to college! Go our education system..

    • by Type44Q ( 1233630 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:27PM (#58451830)

      If you're going to do something stupid or better yet illegal, don't record yourself.

      "If you're going to do something stupid, do it intelligently?"

      • If you are going to do something both stupid and illegal don't record yourself doing it.

        The recordings are essentially a confession, it's a slam dunk case and he's going to go to jail as a result of his stupidity in doing the action and stupidity in recording it. Had he not recorded it proving this would have been harder and he might have got a plea. With a solid confession on board the DA has no reason to plea and they will throw the book at him.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by youngone ( 975102 )
          While I am sure you're right, and he certainly deserves some sort of punishment, does up to 10 years in prison (with up to three years of supervision after release) and a fine totaling up to $250,000 sound like proportional punishment to you?
          I am genuinely curious, because to me even if he gets half of that it seems like total overkill to me.
          The silly boy is probably an entitled prick, and was fired for good reasons, but wouldn't a few months prison, and some probation seem like an appropriate response?
          • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @08:34PM (#58452042) Homepage Journal

            Honestly, prison seems excessive for most any property crime. Restitution with penalties and interest, an ankle monitor, and a few years of weekends picking up trash seems good. Throw in a jumpsuit that says I'm the jackass that burned out the computers fr fun. If he doesn't seem genuinely repentant, make him wear donkey ears while he picks up the trash.

            • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @05:53AM (#58453308)

              Yeah but how are we going to keep the PIC funded if we adopt your idea? Don't you understand there's campaign donations involved here?

            • Honestly, prison seems excessive for most any property crime

              Does it though? I mean, you willingly destroyed property that has some value to it. Someone else now has to dedicate time and effort to restore what was broken and there are a bunch of people who couldn't do their work because of some idiots actions. Sure, you could get the perpetrators to "right the wrong" by spending their own time and money restoring the original state but that doesn't make up for lost productivity and whatever other consequences there were - you know, intangible things.

              I think pr

              • by Pascoea ( 968200 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @09:50AM (#58454112)

                I think prison is entirely appropriate here and for other property crimes. If someone decides to destroy/ruin/steal someone else's property, they should be put behind bars for a while so they understand there are consequences to stupid and negative actions.

                How does one pay restitution when they are locked up in prison? Punishment isn't the sole purpose of the justice system. There are ways to implement a punishment, pay back the damaged parties, and eventually reincorporate the offender as a valuable member of society. Put the guy to work and direct the earnings towards the damaged party. You could having him pick up trash off the side of the road, or ideally assign him a job where he can learn a valuable skill and proceed into a successful life once his restitution is paid. If it makes you feel better, throw him in jail for a month to let him know what awaits if he fucks up again, then put an ankle bracelet on him and make him stay in some sort of halfway home until his debt is paid. Just throwing him behind bars for 5-10 years isn't going to solve anything.

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                To what end? They can't pay their restitution in prison, they can't maintain their other responsabilities, it costs society over 60K/year to keep them there, renders them LESS able to integrate productively into society later, teaches them that society is the enemy, and schools them in new more exciting ways to commit crime.

                If you beat a dog that pees on the rug, all you'll get is a dangerously bad tempered dog that pees on the rug.

            • by Rolgar ( 556636 )

              Is prison warranted in property crimes? How about if we're talking about white collar criminals who take millions? Bank robbers who threaten people with weapons?

              I definitely think there is a place for prison for property crimes. Either repay the full amount, or whatever you can, then somewhere between 1 day/$200 - 1 day/$1000 for whatever can't be repaid/repaired. Let's say we're generous, and give 1 day/$1000 owed. Perhaps they find he has $5000. From the $58,000 he owed, they take his $5000, then give him

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                The assault in a bank robbery is not a property crime, it's assault.

                As for Madoff, a long term membership in Club Fed on our dime doesn't do anything to make the people he wronged whole. Paying back every last penny he stole with penalties and interest does.

                How are you going to enforce a 270 year prison sentence? Are you planning to keep his rotting corpse in a cell?

              • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • Honestly, prison seems excessive for most any property crime. Restitution with penalties and interest, an ankle monitor, and a few years of weekends picking up trash seems good. Throw in a jumpsuit that says I'm the jackass that burned out the computers fr fun. If he doesn't seem genuinely repentant, make him wear donkey ears while he picks up the trash.

              Restitution should be having to pay for the replacement systems and personally rebuilding and configuring each one of them.

          • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @09:00PM (#58452124) Homepage

            Of course that would be unreasonable, but that's how the attorney general gets to prescribe your actual sentence through a plea deal. We'll drop the crazy charges and you'll serve one year or we go to court and try to nail you for ten, what'll it be? It's a huge risk to fight the charges even if you're innocent, if you're objectively guilty and take it to court for a lesser sentence your legal team had better be miracle workers. In most cases a jury will end up much closer to the legal maximum than the plea deal because they feel like slam dunking criminals. Remember this [cnn.com] case?

            • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @12:27AM (#58452556)

              It's a huge risk to fight the charges even if you're innocent,

              My understanding is hiring a lawyer to get a plea deal is around $10-30k. If it goes to trial it's a minimum of $100k. Just for the lawyer. Expert witnesses and other crap add to that.

              Think about that for a bit. You get charged with something you didn't do. Not only are you trading off 1 year vs 10, if you roll the dice and go for broke you're, well, broke even if you win.

              Something is broken with our system of "justice".

              • Something is broken with our system of "justice".

                You are right, but I can assure you that things are far far worse than you can possibly imagine. I am a career IT guy (I am American by the way) but I have plenty of friends who are lawyers and they've taught me a lot about how the US justice system really works. Imagine the following scenario which could happen. Just suppose some friend or neighbor or acquaintance gets angry with you and sues you over something that is complete bs, but they are trying to ruin you financially. You hire lawyer and fi

              • by laird ( 2705 )

                Except that if you're innocent, you can often get the other side to cover legal costs.

                Of course, in this case not only did he do something blatantly illegal, he filmed himself doing it, so 'innocent' isn't really an option.

                • Good luck getting the state to pay for your legal costs if you are found not guilty.

                  If you win a civil suit then maybe but not in a criminal case.

                • I would guess (I have no data) that the extreme vast majority of dropped charges and acquittals are not paired with the government handing over a "oh, our bad" with a check for the cost of your legal team to defend against the State's charges.

                  In civil matters, yes there are measures for counter-suing to cover legal costs, as well as punitive damages that can be levied for frivolous actions. Not so much with criminal actions - sure there are statutes against malicious prosecution and so on, but good luck ma

          • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @09:07PM (#58452152) Journal

            He didn't get 10 years.

            The article, like most, quotes the maximum anyone could ever get for violating a particular statute. Rarely does anyone get the maximum. The judge takes into account exactly what the person did, their record, etc. In most cases, the penalty is actually negotiated with the defendant via their attorney.

            The crime he was charged with would be something like "intentionally destroying property greater than $10,000". That covers taking a baseball bat to your ex-boyfriend's car, destroying the school computers, intentionally driving a bulldozer through someone's house, and lots of other ways of destroying lots of things. The WORST possible cases of "intentionally destroying property valued *over* $10,000" could get 10 years, if the defendant told the judge "fuck you, I'll do it again when I get out".

            You can reduce the judge's descretion by enacting a specific law against "destroying a schools computers" and another law against "destroying your neighbor's car" ans another against "destroying the judge's house", but I think we have enough laws already.

          • He'll never do the 10. This is the opening shot from the DA, pushing this guy and his lawyer into the room to plead it down to 1-2 years plus a multi-year tail of probation and parole. State's attorneys do this all the time - announce the maximum to scare the shit out of you (especially if they have a solid case, which they definitely do here), and then offer a deal that saves the taxpayers the expense and hassle of a jury trial as well as the expense of locking this asshole up for a further 8 years.

            And r

        • The assistant DA will often accept a plea for less of a sentence in order to spare the taxpayer the expense and time of a trial that has a known outcome due to all the considerations you mention.

          This guy will see the inside of a jail for a few years, and still get a fine; but it won't be what is reported here. Especially since it was a non-violent crime - they'll kick him due to overcrowding long before he's in for 10 years even if he eats the whole meal.

      • If you're going to do something stupid or better yet illegal, don't record yourself.

        "If you're going to do something stupid, do it intelligently?"

        Crime in a nutshell, lol

        The number of super genius criminals who outsmart everybody (like in the movies) is very, very small ...

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:49PM (#58451900)
      For a lot of the people doing stuff like this, if they can't brag about the crime, there's no point doing it. It's not really anarchy or revenge that they seek. They're attention whores. They thrive on the publicity and praise/criticism they get. For them, pulling a stunt like this without recording it (and distributing the recording) is like the proverbial tree that falls in the woods and nobody is around to hear. In their minds, it's indistinguishable from the tree never falling / them never having committed the crime.
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      Well at least frying a bunch of computers is better than shooting up a building full of people.
      • by fazig ( 2909523 )
        How about neither?
        It's not a dichotomous choice of either frying a bunch of computers or shooting up a building of people. And it's also not like getting revenge in some destructive way was the only option in this case.
  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:19PM (#58451796)
    And shows how fucked up the US "justice" system is. Average sentence for murder is something like seven years. He should be given a psych evaluation and made to pay restitution via wage garnishment in the future.
    • by Goetterdaemmerung ( 140496 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:36PM (#58451860)

      And shows how fucked up the US "justice" system is. Average sentence for murder is something like seven years. He should be given a psych evaluation and made to pay restitution via wage garnishment in the future.

      He is unlikely to get 10 years. That's the maximum sentence when they add up the maximum for each charge and it makes it more newsworthy. The maximum for murder is life without parole or death, and as you say the average may be closer to 7 years. In this case since he admitted fault and agreed to pay for the damages he will get some smaller sentence, possibly time already served or a few months. It is likely his visa will be revoked.

      • by rahvin112 ( 446269 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @08:15PM (#58451986)

        His confession (recording of the act) makes it unlikely prosecutors will make any deal of any kind. All his bargaining power is gone with that confession. They tend to throw the book at people when they have a confession. If he pleads guilty the Judge might have some sympathy, but if he fights it he'll get the full kit.

        • Jails are crowded. Investing a jail cell for 10 years for a non-violent crime, when more dangerous people deserve harsh punishment, may not appreal to a prosecutor.

    • by bws111 ( 1216812 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:40PM (#58451868)

      Oh horseshit. First of all, he has not been sentenced to anything yet. 10 years is the maximum he could get, whereas the maximum for murder is life imprisonment, or in some cases death. Secondly, the AVERAGE murder sentence is 40.6 years, where did you get that idiotic 7 years? The average property crime sentence is about 4 years. https://www.bjs.gov/content/pu... [bjs.gov]

      • Secondly, the AVERAGE murder sentence is 40.6 years

        Yet somehow the MEDIAN murder sentence (on the first page of your link) is less than 14 years, far closer to OP's estimate than your supposed statistic.

        Sentences for particularly egregious murders tend to be tens or even hundreds of times longer than the murderer can be expected to live [wikipedia.org], which makes the concept of an "average" sentence fairly meaningless.

        • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

          Learn to read. The first page is not showing the sentence length, it is showing time spent in prison before first release. Sentence length is on page 4.

        • The problem with using that ~14 year statistic is that it includes people whose sentence ended by death, and the number of people who died in prison during their terms is not insignificant. That means we can really infer a whole lot about murder sentences from that statistic. If say it's a bit less meaningless than the 40 year average sentence statistic but still it's not that useful. Even then, around 15 years for your average murder makes sense to me. Realize that most of the murders are going to be secon

    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
      I'm not arguing that 10 years isn't excessive. However, in New York(where this happened) 2nd degree murder is 15-25 years. First degree is 20-life. Aggravated murder is life. So, murder is a longer sentence in this case. As for that 7 year average, I'm not going to do all the math. However, only 10 states have a minimum under 10 years. A couple of those, only with mitigating circumstances. Most of the rest have one that is a fair bit higher. Thus, the average should still be above 10 years for minimum sent
    • You could do more monetary damage by totaling someone’s parked Tesla with a lifted pickup truck, and you’re likely not going to face jail time for that.

      He should have to pay for the replacement costs of computers he damaged and any labor costs associated with replacing them/restoring the backups/reconfiguring them. That alone is enough of a deterrent to keep copycats from getting any ideas - there’s no need to “send a message.”

      • that is a false equivalency. This wasn't one incident, it was many repeated incidents and they were without a doubt planned, intentional and completely malicious in nature. This sort of shit needs far more of a message than you will have to pay the damages.
    • Federal sentences come from guidelines with charts and point systems. Google "USSC". Whenever you hear "up to N years", it's going to be nowhere near that much unless a whole bunch of aggravating factors line up, like having a long record.

  • $58,000? (Score:5, Funny)

    by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:58PM (#58451928)
    Wow! He destroyed one Mac!
  • How much damage could of been done with etherkiller?

    http://www.fiftythree.org/ethe... [fiftythree.org]

  • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @08:44PM (#58452072) Homepage Journal

    For once, an MBA has to actually pay for the damage himself.

  • $58K!?!?! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Jason Straight ( 58248 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @09:05PM (#58452144) Homepage

    So, that means 4 Macbooks?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Many years ago I worked for a technical institute. Got an urgent call "the computers where exploding"

    Some little turd of an individual had switched all the machines off then set the power supplies to 110v (in a 220v country)
    So the next person to turn the machine on got a loud bang and smoke...

    Many machines where destroyed. Many courses had to be cancelled.

    People like this need locked up, forever.

     

  • I have to admit, I laughed pretty hard the first time I saw the picture of the etherkiller [fiftythree.org]. (Several people have made similar cables, usually much less hacky looking, e.g. with matching colored cables.)

    I always wondered if some poor bastard ever unwittingly plugged in one of these things that some malicious person left lying around and if so, what happened (and if anyone was ever charged.)
  • It's possible the cops / feds could have secured a conviction based on other evidence, but making video recordings of the criminal act is the sheer height of stupidity. I'd love to know why he was a "former student" but he's clearly not the sharpest tool in the drawer.
  • Tangential to the subject of the article....look at all the consumers of the news who posted "omg 10 years in prison!" whose naivete allowed them to (somewhat) read the article, believe the idea that he's going to get 10 years (not understanding the hyperbole common to news reporting), and be outraged.

    Think of these naive and gullible news consumers next time you read about people being outraged (particularly non Americans commenting on American news) and how easily their feelings are accidentally or delibe

  • Vishwanath Akuthota, the former student

    Well I would certainly hope he's "former."

  • by MasseKid ( 1294554 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @08:37AM (#58453832)
    I fail to understand why this is newsworthy. Next we will see an article about how you can buy hammers nearly anywhere and they can be used to do massive damage to cars, PCs, laptops, monitors, cell phones with no training at all!
  • I hope they accounted for all the damage that he did. He didn't just destroy some computers that have to be replaced, he's wasting a lot of people's time buying and setting up replacement computers, and may have destroyed work that was stored on the computers. And anybody that does something so randomly destructive needs to be punished in order to discourage future random destruction by others.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • To use in training sessions at clients as to the danger of "found" USB keys. I figure bringing in a "trash" obsolete PC that needs to go to recycling anyway and frying it in front of a group of office staff may make an impression, particularly if I manage a model that smokes nicely.

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