Video
that led to Aaron Swartz’s arrest released
Several
minutes of surveillance camera footage used to identify, then arrest
and indict late computer prodigy Aaron Swartz has surfaced due to a
Freedom of Information Act request.
RT,
4
December, 2013
The
eleven minutes of raw video was captured by a hidden camera posted in
the corner of an electrical closet at MIT in January 2011 and shows
Swartz — a then-24-year-old programmer and activist who years
earlier helped code the popular website Reddit — swapping a new
hard drive into a hidden laptop that he connected to the school’s
network in an attempt to download millions of scholarly articles from
the academic website JSTOR.
Authorities
relied on the footage to narrow in on Swartz days later and
ultimately charge him with computer crimes, the likes of which could
have cost him as much as 35 years in prison and a million dollars in
fines if he had been convicted. His case was months away from going
to a jury trial this past January when he hung himself in his New
York City apartment and died
at the age of 26. Federal charges were dropped
shortly thereafter.
Kevin Poulsen — a friend of Swartz and a reporter for Wired — published the video on the internet on Wednesday along with 148 pages of newly-released documents that have just now been relinquished by the government in compliance with a federal judge’s order from this summer. Poulsen’s efforts to uncover the government’s dossier on Swartz following his death had been ignored by the feds until United States District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly compelled the Department of Homeland Security in July to come clean and produce any documents pertaining to Swartz in the possession of their sub-office, the US Secret Service, who along with the Massachusetts District Attorney’s Office had been investigating the MIT incident.
The trove of just-released files consists largely of correspondence between the Secret Service and Justice Department officials in the days and weeks after Swartz’s Jan. 11 suicide, when reports of his passing sparked digital protests, allegations of prosecutorial overreach on the part of the government and questions from lawmakers. Some documents show a back-and-forth between staffers at the Secret Service’s Office of Congressional Affairs and Justice Department officials, who scrambled to gather information on the case days following Swartz’s passing after the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, chaired by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-California), demanded a briefing on their respective roles in the investigation.
“Had he been a journalist and taken that same material that he gained from MIT, he would have been praised for it,” Issa told reporters at Huffington Post at this time of Swartz’s alleged crime. “It would have been like the Pentagon Papers.”
In another document obtained by Poulsen dated only hours after Swartz’s death, a Secret Service agent cautioned a colleague, “Given that he is well known through his association with Reddit and Wired magazine, I would not be surprised if there were to be media inquiries / coverage regarding his death.”
Indeed, Swartz’s legacy and untimely death continue to garner coverage nearly one year after his passing — as evident most clearly by Poulsen’s latest piece for Wired and the subsequent media attention that it has already generated: moments after Poulsen’s latest finds were published online, the internet quickly erupted with chatter about the silent, 11-minute-long video of Swartz shot at the precise movement that made a federal case fall into place and, according to some, ultimately lead to his death.
“The
door to the network closet pops open and a slender figure enters, a
bicycle helmet hanging from one arm. He sheds his backpack and pulls
out a cardboard box containing a small hard drive, then kneels out of
frame. After about five minutes, he stands, turns off the lights and
furtively exits the closet,” Poulsen wrote of the footage. “Those
few minutes of glitchy video — capturing Swartz swapping hard
drives on his stashed laptop — would prove fateful.”
“Looking
at the video, it’s easy to see what MIT and the Secret Service
presumably saw — a furtive hacker going someplace he shouldn’t
go, doing something he shouldn’t do,” Poulsen added. “But
photos from the putative crime scene, also released by the Secret
Service, add context missing from the video: a concrete support in
the network closet is crammed with a jumble of Sharpie graffiti
dating back to the early 1980s — earlier generations of hackers at
the institution that invented hacking, going places they shouldn’t
go, doing things they shouldn’t do, leaving their mark at the very
spot where, on January 4, 2011, MIT lost its tolerance for such
behavior.”
“Aaron
did not commit suicide but was killed by the government,” the
hacker’s father, Robert Swartz, said at his son’s funeral service
in Highland Park, Illinois last January.“Someone who made the world
a better place was pushed to his death by the government.”
Poulsen,
48, was working with Swartz on a system to securely leak and share
sensitive documents that has since been taken over by the Freedom of
the Press Foundation and renamed SecureDrop. In 1995, Poulsen was
sentenced to 51 months in prison for computer crimes, earning himself
the honor of serving what was at the time the longest prison sentence
ever for hacking. If convicted, Swartz could have served a sentence
as long as roughly eight-times what Poulsen spent behind bars.
An
attempt to reform the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act — the hacking
legislation which Swartz and so many other so-called hacktivists have
been charged under — has been proposed in Washington by members of
Congress under the name “Aaron’s Law” after his passing.
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