Gregory King, 21, of Fairfield, Calif., was arrested earlier this week on four counts of electronic transmission of codes to cause damage to protected computers. According to an indictment, which a grand jury issued last week, he used an army of 7,000 zombie computers in multiple attacks on Killanet, a forum for gamers and graphic designers, and CastleCops, a security community that battles spam, phishing and malware.
The government reported that King used Internet connections at his parents' home, a public library, a McDonald's restaurant, and a Best Buy retail store to wage his attacks. According to the indictment, he also heckled his victims, taunting them before and after he attacked them.
The U.S. Attorney's Office out of Sacramento, Calif. reported that when federal agents arrived at King's home to arrest him on Monday morning, the defendant fled out the back door of his residence, carrying a laptop computer with him. He tried to hide it in some bushes in his backyard, but agents obtained a search warrant for the backyard area and seized the computer.
The indictment charges that starting in July of 2004, King launched distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against Killanet's server, while also trying to infect other computers to make them part of his botnet. The attacks allegedly went on until December 2006, according to the indictment.
In a separate charge, the government contends that King launched DDoS attacks against CastleCops in February of this year.
Between the four counts, King allegedly cost his victims an estimated $20,000. No motive was given for the attacks.
Stay connected and informed by visiting the CA Solutions Center Community!

Become a member today for instant access to free InformationWeek research, expert advice, peer perspectives, and more on the following topics:
- Application Performance Management (APM)
- Security Management
- Mainframe 2.0
- IT Automation
- Service Assurance
Also, visit our Government and Financial Services groups to see how these technologies apply specifically to those industries.
NOTE: Offer valid for U.S., U.S. possessions, & Canada only.