Palin E-Mail Hacker Convicted on 2 of 4 Charges

RockX

Banned
A Tennessee jury on Friday convicted the man who hacked Sarah Palin's e-mail account on two of four charges -- computer fraud and obstruction of justice. The panel did not find David Kernall guilty guilty of wire fraud. It deadlocked on an identity theft charge.

The former University of Tennessee student faced as much as 50 years for breaking into Palin's e-mail while the former Alaska governor was the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008.

The two charges for which Kendall was convicted -- unlawful computer access and obstruction of justice -- carried a combined maximum penalty of 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines. It also calls for as much as eight years of supervised release, but it will be up to the judge to decide the sentence.

Prosecutors reserve the right to hold a new trial on the one charge for which they deadlocked.


View attachment 398

:good4u:

Soon to be Bubba's bitch in prison.
 
A Tennessee jury on Friday convicted the man who hacked Sarah Palin's e-mail account on two of four charges -- computer fraud and obstruction of justice. The panel did not find David Kernall guilty guilty of wire fraud. It deadlocked on an identity theft charge.

The former University of Tennessee student faced as much as 50 years for breaking into Palin's e-mail while the former Alaska governor was the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008.

The two charges for which Kendall was convicted -- unlawful computer access and obstruction of justice -- carried a combined maximum penalty of 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines. It also calls for as much as eight years of supervised release, but it will be up to the judge to decide the sentence.

Prosecutors reserve the right to hold a new trial on the one charge for which they deadlocked.


View attachment 398

:good4u:

Soon to be Bubba's bitch in prison.

25 years for hacking someone's computer!!!!!!!!!!!!

Oochy mamma!!
 
A Tennessee jury on Friday convicted the man who hacked Sarah Palin's e-mail account on two of four charges -- computer fraud and obstruction of justice. The panel did not find David Kernall guilty guilty of wire fraud. It deadlocked on an identity theft charge.

The former University of Tennessee student faced as much as 50 years for breaking into Palin's e-mail while the former Alaska governor was the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008.

The two charges for which Kendall was convicted -- unlawful computer access and obstruction of justice -- carried a combined maximum penalty of 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines. It also calls for as much as eight years of supervised release, but it will be up to the judge to decide the sentence.

Prosecutors reserve the right to hold a new trial on the one charge for which they deadlocked.


View attachment 398

:good4u:

Soon to be Bubba's bitch in prison.

Where's the smiles now? :good4u:
 
I seriously doubt he's going to get a sentence anywhere near the maximum. If the judge gives him any more than six months, he's nuts. They didn't mention a mandatory minimum, so apparently it's a very broad charge.


If he serves a single day in jail the judge is nuts.
 
stupid hacker gets what he deserves

relax you don't have to use one of your patented "pretend to agree with republicans so i can appear more unbiased in the future" routines.

Regardless of what he did, giving him possibly 20 years for looking through some emails would be a great injustice. He should have some probation and that should be it.
 
relax you don't have to use one of your patented "pretend to agree with republicans so i can appear more unbiased in the future" routines.

Regardless of what he did, giving him possibly 20 years for looking through some emails would be a great injustice. He should have some probation and that should be it.

he should be hanged, have his citizenship stripped, then have his balls cut off, and then hanged, again, wait, in reverse order

yours truly,

vapormark
 
If he serves a single day in jail the judge is nuts.

If I were the judge, I'd probably give him a break. But I don't know the specifics or the sentencing guidelines here. I was just thinking up the maximum possible sentence that I wouldn't think of as outrageous beyond all reason.
 
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