Gary McKinnon suffers from Asperger's Syndrome Home Secretary Alan Johnson has said he would be breaking the law if he blocked hacker Gary McKinnon's extradition. Mr McKinnon, from north London, who has Asperger's Syndrome, lost a court bid to avoid being extradited to the US. The US wants to try the 43-year-old for what it calls the biggest military computer hack ever in 2001/02. He maintains he was seeking UFO evidence. But writing in the Sunday Times, Mr Johnson said: "It would be unlawful for the home secretary to intervene." The crimes he is accused of are far from trivial

Alan Johnson

Home Secretary

Reaction to decision Gary McKinnon profile Mr Johnson's predecessor Jacqui Smith formally gave the go ahead for Mr McKinnon's extradition in October 2008. He said after a court rules there is enough evidence, a home secretary can prevent an extradition only in very specific circumstances, none of which applied in Mr McKinnon's case. In his article, the home secretary acknowledged that it was "understandable" that many would be sympathetic to "someone who appears to be a misguided, vulnerable young man". But Mr Johnson added that "the crimes he is accused of are far from trivial" and said Mr McKinnon "should be tried fairly for them in a court of law and in the country where the impact of those crimes were felt". The home secretary also denied that extradition law was wrong, arguing that it was appropriate for "an age where crime is increasingly indifferent to national borders". 'Very difficult' Glasgow-born Mr McKinnon could face 60 years or more in prison if convicted in the US. He admits hacking by accessing 97 government computers belonging to organisations such as the US Navy and Nasa, but denies it was malicious. He also denies the allegation he caused damage costing $800,000 (£487,000). US-UK EXTRADITION TREATY 2003 treaty, agreed in aftermath of 9/11 attacks Offence must be punishable by one year or more in jail in both countries US has to prove "reasonable suspicion" for extradition of a British citizen To extradite an American from the US, British must prove "probable cause" Since 2004, 46 people have been sent from the UK to the US for trial, and 27 from the US to the UK Mr McKinnon has always insisted he was looking for classified documents on UFOs, which he believed the US authorities had suppressed. He has challenged refusals by the home secretary and the director of public prosecutions (DPP) to try him in the UK. But the DPP refused to order a UK trial, saying the bulk of the evidence was located in the US and Mr McKinnon's actions were directed against the US military infrastructure. Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. And two judges rejected his court bid to avoid extradition, ruling that it was "a lawful and proportionate response" to his offence, even though they conceded he might find extradition and prison in the US "very difficult indeed". Mr McKinnon has already appealed unsuccessfully to the House of Lords and the European Court of Human Rights. But the case has led to a political row, with Tory leader David Cameron saying it raised "serious questions" about the extradition pact between the US and UK. Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne has argued the American government would not "hang one of their citizens out to dry in the same way". A letter has been sent to President Obama signed by 40 British MPs asking him to step in and "bring this shameful episode to an end". Mr McKinnon's mother, Janis Sharp, has also called on President Obama to intervene.



Bookmark with: Delicious

Digg

reddit

Facebook

StumbleUpon What are these? E-mail this to a friend Printable version