The 18-year-old Lapsus$ hacker who played a critical role in leaking Grand Theft Auto VI footage has been sentenced to life inside a hospital prison, according to a report from the BBC. A British judge ruled on Thursday that Arion Kurtaj is a high risk to the public because he still wants to commit cybercrimes.

In August, a London jury found that Kurtaj carried out cyberattacks against GTA VI developer Rockstar Games and other companies, including Uber and Nvidia. However, since Kurtaj has autism and was deemed unfit to stand trial, the jury was asked to determine whether he committed the acts in question, not whether he did so with criminal intent.

  • @GlitzyArmrest@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 year ago

    It’s not prison, it’s some sort of prison hospital. But still, life is the exact opposite end of the spectrum compared to a light sentence. Like you said, rehabilitation should be the goal, and imposing life sentences on 18 year olds is not how you make that happen.

    He only got a life sentence because he made corporations look bad IMO. Not because of him saying he’d do it again.

    • admiralteal
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      1 year ago

      I mean, he didn’t even get a life sentence. That’s in the headline, I know, but it’s just not true.

      He’s in the hospital indefinitely, not sentenced to life. There’s a big fat or clause that completely undermines the “life sentence”.

      He’s required to stay in the hospital prison for life unless doctors determine that he’s no longer a danger.

      I’m not really sure what anyone thinks WOULD be just and proper in this kind of situation. I don’t know many details of this particular case, but if there has been due process that determines someone is unsafe to release into society because they lack social capacity, releasing them anyway hardly seems like justice.

      I’d like to believe – though I know it basically isn’t true – that the justice system exists for the sake of justice. That it is primarily concerned with making whole the victims and making sure the criminals are rehabilitated such that they can safely rejoin society and even contribute to it in the future. I think that’s how the justice system should work in a fair and just world. But if you have someone who is actually incapable of rejoining society, what are you supposed to do?

      If we want to focus on the awfulness of this situation, I don’t think the sentence is the issue. I think the focus would need to be on whether or not the hospital treatment has any chance of being effective – because if it doesn’t, THAT’S the story that matters.

      • Who exactly was victimized here? Who was harmed and in what way? God the capitalist bootlicking is insane. Seriously arguing for taking away a neurodivergent person’s agency because some game spoilers got released. Not a good look.

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        -121 year ago

        A British judge ruled on Thursday that Arion Kurtaj is a high risk to the public because he still wants to commit cybercrimes.

        Right in the summary. He’s not going to murder people. This is a huge over reach on the use of mental hospitals.

        • admiralteal
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          1 year ago

          It’s also right in the article that he was violent. That doesn’t really matter though; what matters is whether he’s competent to stand trial and whether it is reasonable to release him back to the regular justice system or general public.

          I guess your point is that there’s no safety hazard since his particular behavior isn’t at least murder? Or maybe that cybercrime in particular is actually good and not a problem? It’s not really a coherent framework to discuss these things either way.

          • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            -81 year ago

            Well yeah. A danger to the public generally refers to killing or maiming yourself or others. That’s been the standard for a long time now.

            And the judge said why they committed him. There’s no need to go looking for more.

            • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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              31 year ago

              No no no, he’s going to leak more GTA 6 if he gets out. That’s super dangerous stuff that the public shouldn’t see yet.

        • AnonTwo
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          151 year ago

          I feel like just saying this is autism, is insulting to people with autism? The violent acts the article said he did can’t just be attributed to autism.

          Like the OP wants to compare this to law enforcement crimes where it’s about what someone has done, whereas this is about medical hospitalization because of what someone is currently doing

          Like he’s an active, physical threat. The cybercrimes are very secondary to what is going on.

          • FaceDeer
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            91 year ago

            Yeah, I’m getting bothered by this too. My brother had a pretty bad case of autism, he suffered from hard-to-control anger issues, but he learned how to keep those outbursts from causing damage or harming the people around him.

            Maybe this guy can learn to control himself, maybe he can’t, autism is an extremely broad and varied condition. But either way, it’s not unreasonable to keep him in a hospital until he’s safe.

          • @girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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            -81 year ago

            Are you autistic? Cause I am and nothing I said was or is insulting.

            What is insulting is you somehow thinking you know anything about how difficult it is for people like us to live in a world where everyone tells us how we should live without first understanding who we are and how our brains work.

            The so-called violence wasn’t described in detail … so it could mean they threw food at someone or banged a chair on the floor.

        • NoIWontPickaName
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          131 year ago

          Not of autism damnit. His desire/inability not to continue to commit crimes.

          Don’t try to twist me

        • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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          91 year ago

          Cured of the desire to commit further crimes. Not cured of autism.

          How exactly they’ll determine that, I don’t know.

          • @Shyfer@ttrpg.network
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            11 year ago

            Will probably wait until they’re at least smart enough to lie about not wanting to commit more crimes. Maybe then they’ll be mentally fit enough to stand trial, but I’m not sure.