Massachusetts man convicted of cyber
attack on hospital
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[August 02, 2018]
By Nate Raymond
BOSTON (Reuters) - A Massachusetts man was
convicted on Wednesday of carrying out a cyber attack on a Boston
hospital's network on behalf of the hacking activist group Anonymous in
protest of its treatment of a teenager at the center of a high-profile
custody dispute.
A federal jury in Boston found Martin Gottesfeld, 32, guilty of one
count of conspiracy to damage protected computers and one count of
damaging protected computers, prosecutors said.
Gottesfeld, who is in federal custody, is scheduled to be sentenced on
Nov. 14. In a statement posted to YouTube that was recorded in case he
was convicted, Gottesfeld said he plans to challenge the verdict.
He also accused prosecutors of ignoring what happened to the teen at the
center of the case and of "not telling you the full truth."
"I'm going to keep fighting," he said. "I'm not going to give up."
Prosecutors said that in late 2013, Gottesfeld, a computer systems
engineer living in Somerville, Massachusetts, learned about a child
custody dispute involving a Connecticut teenager named Justina
Pelletier.
Pelletier had been taken into state custody in Massachusetts after a
dispute over her diagnosis arose between her parents and Boston
Children's Hospital, which determined her health problems were
psychiatric in nature and believed her parents were interfering with her
treatment.
Her case garnered national headlines and drew the attention of religious
and political groups who viewed it as an example of government
interference with parental rights.
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Gottesfeld, who disagreed with the hospital's diagnosis, began
advocating online for her release, prosecutors said.
They said Gottesfeld in March 2014 launched a distributed denial of
service (DDOS) attack on a residential treatment facility called
Wayside Youth & Family Support Network where Pelletier was a
resident following her discharge from the hospital.
DDOS attacks shut down or slow websites by flooding them with data.
He later in April 2014 launched a DDOS attack on behalf of Anonymous
on the network of Boston Children's Hospital that not only knocked
it off the internet but also affected several other nearby
hospitals, prosecutors said.
Amid a federal investigation into his role in the cyber attacks,
Gottesfeld in early 2016 fled, prosecutor said.
In mid-February 2016, a Disney Cruise Line vessel rescued Gottesfeld
and his wife from a disabled powerboat off the coast of Cuba,
prosecutors said. He was arrested when the cruise ship returned to
Miami.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston)
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