A man who hacked a prison's system to change the release date of a co-worker was today ... jailed. Konrads Voits a hacker from the Michigan, he will have to serve seven years and three months.
As he says Bleeping Computer, Voits tried to access inmate records in order to get an associate released early.
27 will also have to pay 235.488 dollars as a fine for the full cost of investigating and coping with the violation.
According to the Voits indictment, issued in December of 2017, from January to March of the same year, the hacker was trying to release a prisoner.
Voits started with social engineering trying to get prison staff to visit the ewashtenavv.org domain by changing the "w" to the real domain of the ewashtenaw.org prison website in an effort to make it look normal.
The malicious domain was a complete copy of the real prison website, but contained malicious content software. The hacker chatted with prison staff, posing as "Daniel Greene" and asked for help with "court records", requiring staff to visit the fake website.
Spear-phishing aimed to lure prison staff to visit the malicious domain and download malicious applications on the booking shop computers, but it failed.
Viots was not discouraged. He later emailed the prison, pretending to be IT staff upgrading prison systems. Voits again asked prison staff to visit the malicious domain and download executable "upgrade" files containing malware.
This time he succeeded: He managed to install malware on prison systems and was able to collect information, such as the login credentials, emails and personal information of 1600 employees.
Voits also managed to gain access to the XJail system, an internal application for prisoners' records. In March, through XJail he changed the records of at least one prisoner.
However, the hacker underestimated prison staff. The violation was detected almost immediately, and the malicious file was corrected immediately. At the same time, the FBI was notified to locate the attacker.
"Voit's intrusion forced the county to hire a company to deal with such incidents to determine the full extent of the breach, restore files, verify the accuracy of the electronic records of almost all inmates and try to reassure its 1600 employees. whose personal data had been leaked ", says the indictment.
"Hopefully, after his release, Voits will be able to use his tremendous skills to make our society a better place."
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