New Zealand teenager charged in cyber crime network
New Zealand teenager charged in cyber crime network
Owen Thor Walker 18, has charges against him that carry a maximum sentence of 10 years.

Wellington (New Zealand): A New Zealand teenager allegedly at the centre of an international cyber crime network appeared on Friday in court where he was charged with computer hacking crimes.

Computer programmer Owen Thor Walker, 18 was charged with two counts of accessing a computer for dishonest purpose, damaging or interfering with a computer system, possessing software for committing crime, and two counts of accessing a computer system without authorisation.

The charges carry a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

Walker did not enter a plea when he appeared briefly in Thames Magistrate's Court in northern New Zealand. He was released on bail. Bail conditions were not immediately available.

Walker was arrested in November last year in the northern city of Hamilton as part of an international investigation into a cyber crime network accused of infiltrating 1.3 million computers and skimming millions of dollars from victims' bank accounts.

"We worked closely with US and Dutch authorities on this investigation. This arrest is significant not just to New Zealand but the international community as well," police spokesman Detective Inspector Peter Devoy said.

"Very few people who carry out this sort of offending are ever prosecuted so the resolution of this case has huge international implications," he said.

The case is part of an international crackdown on hackers who allegedly assume control of thousands of computers and amass them into centrally controlled clusters known as botnets.

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