Miss Teen USA sextortion case: Hacker pleads guilty
Miss Teen USA sextortion case: A 19-year-old man has pled guilty to hacking into several young women's computers, including Miss Teen USA, taking photographs of them without their knowledge, then threatening to post those photos online if the women did not send him more nude photographs.
Darren Decker/Miss Universe L.P., LLLP/Reuters
Santa Ana, Calif.
A Southern California computer science student pleaded guilty yesterday to hacking the computers of Miss Teen USA and other young women, secretly photographing them, and threatening to post the pictures online if they didn't send him more naked photos.
Jared James Abrahams, 19, answered a series of questions from US District Judge James Selna in an Orange County courtroom, including an explanation of the crimes that were committed.
"I hacked several girls' computers and, using their webcams, took photos of them when they weren't aware," Abrahams said meekly.
Abrahams pleaded guilty to three counts of extortion and one count of unauthorized computer access. He faces up to 11 years in prison and fines of up to $1 million when he's sentenced in March.
Prosecutors say that over the past two years, Abrahams hacked into the computers of at least a dozen women in their late teens or early 20s from various states and countries, including Miss Teen USA Cassidy Wolf. Abrahams and Wolf went to high school together.
Court records say he also sent the women anonymous emails telling them he had downloaded nude photos of them. He told them he would publish the images on social media sites if they didn't send him additional pictures or undress for him. If the women complied, Abrahams promised to destroy the images.
At least two of his victims gave in to his demands, authorities said.
"Did you know you were extorting them when you made these demands?" Selna asked.
"Yes," Abrahams responded.
Dressed in matching gray pants and shirt with a black jacket, Abrahams told the judge he has autism and has been under treatment for the past 10 years. He said he was on three medications Tuesday, but he said they wouldn't affect his ability to enter a guilty plea.
Outside court, his attorney Alan Eisner said Abrahams apologizes for his actions, and that the autism played a contributing role in the scheme.
"The social disorder had, certainly, a part in it," Eisner said. "Again, I say that not to blame the conduct on anything, not to make an excuse for the conduct, but that's part of the full picture."
In Wolf's case, Abrahams was able to take nude photos of her without her knowledge, authorities said. He posted a naked photo of Wolf online after she didn't respond to him.
According to an FBI affidavit, Abrahams told Wolf: "Your dream of being a model will be transformed into a porn star."
Wolf, also 19 and a graduate of Great Oak High School in Temecula, won the Miss Teen USA crown in August. She has spoken publically about the incident, saying she would use her fame to highlight cybercrime.
Abrahams is accused of employing similar hacking tactics used by a Florida man who was sentenced to 10 years in prison last year after he broke into the personal online accounts of Scarlett Johansson, Christina Aguilera, and other women and posted revealing photos and other material online.