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Teen may face retrial over DoS allegations


January 06 2006

Teen may face retrial over DoS allegations

 

But even he's calling for reform of "pretty useless" computer law


The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) is considering appealing a judge's decision that a teenager who was accused of bombarding a former employer with millions of emails has no case to answer. The CPS indicated it is carefully considering an appeal to the High Court against District Judge Kenneth Grant's decision. A CPS spokesperson said on Wednesday: "We are considering making an appeal by way of a case stated." The case was dismissed in November at Wimbledon Magistrates Court. The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, allegedly sent five million emails to his ex-employer in a denial-of -service (DoS) attack, crashing its server. The youth was charged under the Computer Misuse Act (CMA). Judge Grant ruled that this kind of attack is not illegal under the CMA, because the sending of an email would not cause any unauthorised modification to the server that received it. Late last year the CPS asked Wimbledon Magistrate's Court to submit a draft case outlining how it reached its decision. It received this in December and is currently studying it. According to the spokesperson, the CPS may now ask the High Court for its opinion on the judge's interpretation of the law, with a view to overturning the ruling. The CPS spokesperson added: "An appeal is normally aimed at overturning a conviction or an acquittal. We have the right to appeal against what we believe is a wrong in law." The spokesperson said if an appeal is successful, and the judge's decision is overturned, there would be a retrial and the case would go back to the magistrate's court. The CMA is widely regarded as being inadequate by experts because it does not cover DoS attacks. In November 2005 Derek Wyatt MP, chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Internet Group, chastised the government for failing to strengthen the CMA. Wyatt called for the government to bring in legislation criminalising DoS attacks as soon as possible. He said: "It's time they found a way of including the small changes necessary in a Home Office bill or helped with a Private Member's Bill." The teenager accused of email bombing his former employer is also keen for the CMA to be modified to make DoS attacks illegal. He told silicon.com sister site, ZDNet UK, a potential High Court appeal by the CPS could actually be a good thing. The teenager said: "An appeal was expected, and to be honest I'm quite glad it's going to the High Court. It'll hopefully get to the stage where it'll get to be a well-known case and there will be a need for law reform, which I'm quite happy to be a part of, seeing as the current computer law is pretty useless and needs amending. "On a more personal note - seeing as I'm the one being prosecuted, it's not the most thrilling thing in the world."


 

Reproduced from an article published by Silicon.com
© Silicon.com

The original article can be viewed here:
http://management.silicon.com/government/0,39024677,39155404,00.htm

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