UK 'hacker' Lauri Love fears death in US prison Published duration 6 September 2016

media caption Lauri Love, alleged cyber-hacker facing extradition to the US: "There's very poor conditions in US prisons for people with mental health difficulties - I think I would at risk of dying"

A British man wanted in the US for allegedly hacking into government computers says he fears dying in jail if he is extradited.

Lauri Love, who has Asperger's syndrome, worries he will be sentenced to up to 99 years.

"If I went into a US prison, I don't think I'd leave again," he told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme

A judge will announce next week whether Mr Love, from Stradishall, Suffolk, should be extradited.

Mr Love, who could face trials in three different US states, is accused of hacking into the FBI, the US central bank and the country's missile defence agency.

'Suicide risk'

He said the US prison system was "poor" at handling people with psychological conditions, who faced widespread bullying.

"The way that mental health is dealt with in America is not in any way therapeutic," he said. "I have Asperger's and I have depression, so suicide is a real risk.

"And if I get a 99-year sentence, it's an absurd length of time, meaning I would die in prison anyway."

Mr Love calculates this could be the total combined sentence length if he is found guilty of hacking offences in each of New Jersey, Virginia and New York.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons says it works to provide education to staff and inmates on suicide prevention.

Mr Love told Victoria Derbyshire he could be "bullied" into accepting a plea bargain in the US - receiving a shorter sentence in return for admitting one or more of the alleged offences.

"The threat of what might happen to me is always in the background," he said. "I've been scratching my face as a nervous reaction, which has exacerbated my eczema."

'Sovereignty'

Mr Love, 31, was first arrested at home in 2013 and had computer equipment seized by British police, who then released him on bail.

He was not charged in the UK, where the investigation into him was dropped.

In England and Wales, the maximum sentence for a computer crime such as those of which Mr Love is accused is two years and eight months.

His defence team argues that his depression and Asperger's syndrome - a form of autism - mean he should not be sent abroad, but US prosecutors say he is using his mental health issues as an excuse to escape justice.

"That's offensive to me, as someone who has had problems with mental health for all of my life," Mr Love said. "I really feel for my parents, who have the worry and the stress of this. It's been very difficult for them."

In 2012. the then Home Secretary, Theresa May, blocked the extradition to the US of Gary McKinnon, a UK hacker with mental health issue, saying he was a suicide risk.

Since then, the law has changed, so judges rather than politicians decide on extraditions.

Mr Love's case is regarded as the first real test of the new law.

A judge at Westminster Magistrates' Court will announce her decision on whether to extradite Mr Love on 16 September.

Mr Love said he was "guardedly optimistic" he would be allowed to remain in the UK.