June 24, 2011
Lulzsec releases hundreds of documents belonging to Arizona Law Enforcement
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The increasingly brash hacker group LulzSec released what it says is only the first of many “payloads” to the Internet today: A cache of documents taken from servers belonging to the Arizona Department of Public Safety.
The release, some 446 megabytes of documents that are considered sensitive, is intended, the group says, as a retaliation for a controversial Arizona state law that makes it legal for police officers to question anyone they suspect of being an illegal immigrant. The documents were released via the BitTorrent tracker site The Pirate Bay. More such releases are coming, LulzSec said.
From the LulzSec press release:
The group defaced a Web site belonging to someone in the Netherlands they say is a member of LulzSec and are on a campaign to name LulzSec members and out them to police. As always, their claims are impossible to vet. But they do suggest that all the media noise that LulzSec is making is starting to grate on other members of the so-called hacker underground. Team Poison isn’t the first to express such sentiment. A group calling itself Web Ninjas has sought to expose the people it says are LulzSec members. And another possibly connected person or group tried to do the same thing before that, and even claimed an arrest that hadn’t occurred.
The release, some 446 megabytes of documents that are considered sensitive, is intended, the group says, as a retaliation for a controversial Arizona state law that makes it legal for police officers to question anyone they suspect of being an illegal immigrant. The documents were released via the BitTorrent tracker site The Pirate Bay. More such releases are coming, LulzSec said.
From the LulzSec press release:
We are releasing hundreds of private intelligence bulletins, training manuals, personal email correspondence, names, phone numbers, addresses and passwords belonging to Arizona law enforcement. We are targeting AZDPS specifically because we are against SB1070 and the racial profiling anti-immigrant police state that is Arizona.The release followed a day during which a rival group claimed to have attacked and defaced a Web site said to belong to a LulzSec member. The other group of hackers, calling itself TeaMp0isoN — or, in English, Team Poison — a group with a long history of defacing Web sites going back to mid-2009. Fox News managed to interview someone with that group, who called LulzSec a bunch of “script kiddies,” an epithet meant to convey the idea that for all the media attention it has attracted in recent weeks, LulzSec’s actual hacking skills aren’t terribly impressive.
The documents classified as “law enforcement sensitive”, “not for public distribution”, and “for official use only” are primarily related to border patrol and counter-terrorism operations and describe the use of informants to infiltrate various gangs, cartels, motorcycle clubs, Nazi groups, and protest movements.
Every week we plan on releasing more classified documents and embarassing [sic] personal details of military and law enforcement in an effort not just to reveal their racist and corrupt nature but to purposefully sabotage their efforts to terrorize communities fighting an unjust “war on drugs”.
Hackers of the world are uniting and taking direct action against our common oppressors – the government, corporations, police, and militaries of the world. See you again real soon!
The group defaced a Web site belonging to someone in the Netherlands they say is a member of LulzSec and are on a campaign to name LulzSec members and out them to police. As always, their claims are impossible to vet. But they do suggest that all the media noise that LulzSec is making is starting to grate on other members of the so-called hacker underground. Team Poison isn’t the first to express such sentiment. A group calling itself Web Ninjas has sought to expose the people it says are LulzSec members. And another possibly connected person or group tried to do the same thing before that, and even claimed an arrest that hadn’t occurred.
About the Author:
Ifeanyi Emeka is the founder of this blog and also writes for Tech Forked. He is passionate about tech stuffs and loves customizing blogger themes.
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Lulzsec releases hundreds of documents belonging to Arizona Law Enforcement
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