A 16-year-old British boy has been arrested for allegedly hacking into the emails of the director of the CIA from his bedroom.

Police working alongside the FBI, swooped on an address in the East Midlands and arrested the teenager, who is unnamed but goes by the name of 'Cracka' online.

As well as hacking into the email accounts of CIA director John Brennan, he is also accused of carrying out cyber attacks on a number of other high ranking US government officials.

A 16-year-old British teenager has been arrested for allegedly hacking into the emails of the director of the CIA, John Brennan, pictured

According to CNN, the teenager was reportedly arrested on Tuesday on several counts of suspicion of conspiracy to commit unauthorised access to computer material and has now been released on conditional bail.

A spokesman for the South East Regional Organised Crime Unit said: 'The South East Regional Organised Crime Unit (SEROCU) can confirm we have arrested a 16-year-old boy on Tuesday in the East Midlands.

'He was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit unauthorised access to computer material contrary to Section 1 Computer Misuse Act 1990, conspiracy to commit unauthorised access with intent to commit further offences contrary to Section 2 Computer Misuse Act 1990; and conspiracy to commit unauthorised acts with intent to impair, or with recklessness as to impairing operation of a computer contrary to Section 3 Computer Misuse Act 1990.'

For several months, a group calling itself 'Crackas with Attitude' has been revealing information about Brennan as well as Jeh Johnson, the Homeland Security Secretary, James Clapper, the director of National Intelligence and FBI director Mark Giuliano.

For several months, a group calling itself 'Crackas with Attitude' has been revealing information about Brennan as well as Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, left, and Mark Giuliano, right, director of the FBI

The director of the National Intelligence Agency James Clapper has also been targeted by 'Crackas with Attitude's hacks

For several months, a group calling itself 'Crackas with Attitude' has been revealing information about Brennan as well as Jeh Johnson, the Homeland Security Secretary, James Clapper, the director of National Intelligence and FBI director Mark Giuliano.

WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy group, began releasing documents from Mr Brennan's private AOL account in October, days after a hacker claimed he had gained access to it.

Other documents released so far have included a contact list, policy recommendations on Afghanistan and Pakistan, and his family's addresses and phone numbers.

Although an embarrassment, the documents have not exposed national security secrets, and Mr Brennan appears to have stopped using the account in 2008 when he rejoined the government after a period away from public life.

'I was certainly outraged by it,' Brennan said of the hack at the time, adding that he also was troubled by the way some of the media handled it.

Police swooped on an address in the East Midlands and arrested the teenager, who is unnamed but goes by the name of 'Cracka' online (file picture)

'Because of some things that were put out, the implication of the reporting was that I was doing something wrong or inappropriate or in violation of my security responsibility, which was not certainly the case,' he said.

Meanwhile earlier this week, an anonymous hacker leaked sensitive data from over 20,000 supposed FBI employees and over 9,000 alleged Department of Homeland Security staff.

The cyber criminal carried out one half of the hack right after the Super Bowl kick off on Sunday night,.