Jay Leiderman – Internet Crimes Defense Lawyer – Hacking, Fraud, Embezzlement, Identity Theft, etc.

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To contact Jay Leiderman please click: http://jayleiderman.com/htm/contact.phpor call 805-654-0200
Jay Leiderman is a criminal defense lawyer based in Ventura, California. Jay was certified as a criminal law specialist by the California State Bar Board of Legal Specialization. The Atlantic Magazine called Leiderman the “Hacktivist’s Advocate” for his work defending hacker-activists accused of computer crimes, or so-called (“Hacktivism”) especially people associated with the hacktivist collective Anonymous.
Other noteworthy cases Leiderman defended include People v. Diaz, which went to the California Supreme Court and made law on the ability of police to search a cell phone, Louis Gonzalez, who was falsely accused of rape, attempted murder and torture by the mother of his child and was jailed for 83 days before he was released and ultimately found factually innocent, the Andrew Luster or so-called “Max Factor” heir habeas corpus proceeding, wherein his sentence was reduced by 74 years the first-ever trial of medical marijuana defendants in San Luis Obispo County, California County, and Ventura County, California’s first ever concentrated Mexican Mafia prosecution – the largest case in the history of Ventura County.
Leiderman co-authored a book on the legal defense of California medical marijuana crimes, which was published by NORML, the National Organization For the Reform of Marijuana Laws. He is also a founding member of the Whistleblower’s Defense League, “formed to combat what they describe as the FBI and Justice Department’s use of harassment and over-prosecution to chill and silence those who engage in journalism, Internet activism or dissent.” Leiderman frequently comments in diverse areas of the media about criminal and social justice issues. He also lectures around the state and nation on various criminal defense topics.

For more please visit: http://www.JayLeiderman.com
To contact Jay Leiderman please
OR CALL 805-654-0200
Here are some profiles of Jay Leiderman and quotes from news stories:
It is fashionable always to cast aspersion upon those that defend persons accused of committing crimes. The viler the accused crime, the more vigorous defense the accused needs, yet, at the same time, the more vitriol the defense attorney will face. I cannot speak for my brethren in the legal community, I can only state that what follows is my own brand of patriotism; I defend those charged with crimes because it is both my duty as a lawyer and as an American. Each piece of resistance to the encroachment of overreaching governmental power is, in and of itself, a victory for freedom.”
From: On the Defense of Criminals, an essay by Jay Leiderman http://jayleiderman.blogspot.com/2013/01/on-defense-of-criminals-essay-by-jay.html
The link below is a profile of Jay Leiderman done by the Atlantic Weekly Magazine with a quote from the piece: “We have an opportunity here to make the courts, as these cases wind their way up, understand privacy issues, emerging tech issues, against the backdrop of civil rights and through the prism of free information.”
This is a profile of Jay Leiderman done by the Ventura County Star: Ventura attorney represents high-profile hackers in a red-hot area of the law
‘Find the best defense attorney you can
‘Hackers being prosecuted under the CFAA don’t just need digital experts; they need good defense against a law vague enough to encompass most anything http://www.cjr.org/cloud_control/lawyers_hacker_call_part_2.php?page=all
“Investigators like to wave around the word ‘gang.’ They use it to strike fear in the heart of the community. It tends to also involve a lot of puffery and allegations that maybe perhaps aren’t 100 percent solid,” Leiderman said.
From: Police say Mexican Mafia prison gang led crime ring in Ventura County http://www.vcstar.com/news/2012/nov/27/one-man-led-large-prison-crime-ring-in-ventura/?print=1
Leiderman thought it was not enough that the government dropped charges. He wanted the criminal justice system to recognize Gonzalez’s innocence affirmatively. There is such a thing as a declaration of factual innocence, he explained to Gonzalez. A judge can grant it. It is exceedingly rare – so rare that many cops and lawyers go a career without seeing one. It means not just that prosecutors couldn’t make a case against you, but that you didn’t do the crime. The case remained on the docket of Ventura County Superior Court Judge Patricia Murphy, who had earlier ordered Gonzalez held without bail. Leiderman petitioned the judge, trying not to get his client’s hopes up. He laid out the case, pointing out the holes in West’s story and the numerous alibi witnesses. Prosecutors did not want Gonzalez declared innocent. They knew a jury wouldn’t convict him but said they couldn’t be positive of his innocence. James Ellison, Ventura County’s chief assistant district attorney, later explained their reasoning: The attack West described was “improbable, but it wasn’t physically impossible.” In January 2009, nearly a year after Gonzalez’s arrest, Leiderman called him excitedly: The judge had sided with them. Gonzalez was soon holding a certified copy of the judge’s order declaring him factually innocent.
From: The Los Angeles Times feature: Could this be happening? A man’s nightmare made real
“The warrant did not give the power to rummage through the journalist’s files,” Leiderman said, adding “there is no indication of why all this information needed to be seized”.
From: Federal agents accused of unwarranted search through journalist’s computer http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/29/matthew-keys-investigation-hacker-computer-search
There is a strong argument to make, as Jay Leiderman demonstrated in the Guardian in the context of the Paypal 14 hacktivist persecution, that the “denial of service” tactics used by hacktivists result in (at most) trivial damage (far less than the cyber-warfare tactics favored by the US and UK) and are far more akin to the type of political protest protected by the First Amendment.

From: “How Covert Agents Infiltrate the Internet to Manipulate, Deceive, and Destroy Reputations” by Glenn Greenwald
https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/02/24/jtrig-manipulation/

“The days of ‘Let’s haul this kid in front of the judge, scare him and send him home with a warning’ are long since gone,” says attorney Jay Leiderman. “Prosecutorial discretion is a great thing if it’s exercised, but it doesn’t happen in any meaningful way these days, because prosecutions are so politicized.”
From: Is former Sacramento media employee Matthew Keys a victim of overzealous, misguided cybercrime prosecution?
“Our best and brightest should be encouraged to find new methods of expression; direct action in protest must not stifled. The dawning of the digital age should be seen as an opportunity to expand our knowledge, and to collectively enhance our communication. Government should have the greatest interest in promoting speech – especially unpopular speech. The government should never be used to suppress new and creative – not to mention, effective – methods of speech and expression.”

“There’s no such thing as a DDoS ‘attack’,” Leiderman said. “A DDoS is a protest, it’s a digital sit it. It is no different than physically occupying a space. It’s not a crime, it’s speech.”

Leiderman “runs the gamut” at his practice, where he focuses on civil rights, marijuana and civil law, he told TPM. During our phone conversation, he was headed to state court to represent the owners of a medical marijuana facility, based in North Ridge, CA.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/idealab/homeless-hacker-lawyer-ddos-isn-t-an-attack-it-s-a-digital-sit-in

“He is a good person. He did a bad thing,” Leiderman told the judge.
From: Santa Paula man gets probation for drunken-driving crash that killed fellow officer

Tin foil as reality,” a phrase hacktivist lawyer Jay Leiderman whipped out during a panel for “The Hacker Wars,” permeated this year’s South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Tex. This new reality, brought on in large part through the revelations of National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, created a situation where Snowden and two other major speakers – Wikileaks’s Julian Assange and journalist Glenn Greenwald – were physically unable to attend and instead used webcams to appear.
http://www.occupy.com/article/snowden-assange-and-greenwald-live-streaming-sxsw#sthash.EOTBdYbg.dpuf

Luster’s attorney Jay Leiderman said his client was sentenced to 124 years in prison “for something that was worth a decade.”
From: Max Factor Heir Andrew Luster Seeks New Trial
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/04/22/convicted-rapist-max-factor-heir-andrew-luster-seeks-new-trial/

“I’m not saying we’re in a police state,” Leiderman says when talking about the restrictions, “but it sure looks like it when you evaluate the system of pretrial release.”
From: Anon on the run: How Commander X jumped bail and fled to Canada
“Based upon this case, the government’s new position is that you are required to be clairvoyant in terms of determining what a protected computer is and what a non protected one is,” he tells me. “From now on you have to be a psychic…because if it isn’t password protected but it’s a ‘protected computer’ you’re potentially going to be found guilty.”
From: We Are Weev
Information is the new aphrodisiac
Information is the new high.
He who controls the information controls your world.
And your government knows it.
From: A speech at a benefit for arrested activists
“Hack has become a sort of all-encompassing term, when in fact some of this was social engineering, some of this was good old-fashioned regular ‘there’s a hole, I’m going to walk through it’,” said Leiderman. “If you left your front door open people wouldn’t really call it a break-in. To some extent Stratfor were unsecure to the point where it was like their front door was open and Mr Hammond allegedly, with some others, walked right in, and people are calling it a hack. “As far as I’m aware, nothing was really hacked in the classic sense,” he added.
From: Analysis: a case of government versus hacktivism

Too much secrecy for too long surrounding electronic monitoring

Wall Street Journal (subscription/registration required)

Long-Term Secrecy Surrounds Electronic Monitoring (“A federal judge’s recent unsealing of a secret government request for electronic monitoring shines a light on how such applications are kept hidden from the public long after criminal cases that result from them are closed.”)

💻📧📱🌇💾💽💳📲📊🐯
Ventura’s Best Lawyer
Jay Leiderman

Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman


Please visit my homepage
JayLeiderman.com
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200
Jay@criminal-lawyer.me

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Hacking USB Firmware

Now the NSA isn’t the only one who can hack your USB firmware: “In a talk at the Derbycon hacker conference in Louisville, Kentucky last week, researchers Adam Caudill and Brandon Wilson showed that they’ve reverse engineered the same USB firmware as Nohl’s SR Labs, reproducing some of Nohl’s BadUSB tricks. And unlike Nohl, the hacker pair has also published the code for those attacks on Github, raising the stakes for USB makers to either fix the problem or leave hundreds of millions of users vulnerable.” Personally, I always thought it was insane that USB drives don’t come with physical write-protect switches to keep them from being infected by malware.

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✅🍁💻📧📱🌇
Ventura’s Best Lawyer
Jay Leiderman
Please visit my homepage
JayLeiderman.com
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200
Jay@criminal-lawyer.me

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THE BEST HOME SECURITY CAMERAS

These days, a $200 monitoring camera can keep a very good eye on your home when you’re gone. Most of these gadgets aren’t designed to stop an intruder, but to provide peace of mind. You use them to find out more about what’s going on in your home with both live and recorded video, and simple information updates.

A good home-monitoring camera should be well-designed but inconspicuous, easy to set up, and extremely easy to use. The best ones make it simple to check in on what’s going on at home, and to get alerts only for the things you want to know about. The best ones also let you check in from all kinds of devices, be it your computer or on mobile.

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💻📧📱🌇💾💽💳📲📊🐯
Ventura’s Best Lawyer
Jay Leiderman

Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman

Please visit my homepage
JayLeiderman.com
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200
Jay@criminal-lawyer.me

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The days of credit card fraud are numbered

In 1960, an IBM engineer named Forrest Parry was developing a new type of ID card for the CIA when he had an epiphany: Why not make each card a tiny data storage device in and of itself? He cut a short length of half-inch wide magnetic tape from a reel and wrapped it around a blank plastic card, secured it with Scotch tape, and then, at his wife’s suggestion, pressed it on with a warm iron.

The magnetic stripe card was born.

READ MORE: http://bit.ly/1roegzP

💻📧📱🌇💾💽💳📲📊🐯
Ventura’s Best Lawyer
Jay Leiderman

Internet Crimes, Computer Crimes, Hacking and Cybercrime

If you have been investigated, arrested or charged contact Defense Lawyer Jay Leiderman

Please visit my homepage
JayLeiderman.com
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200
Jay@criminal-lawyer.me

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New exhibit showcases art in the digital surveillance era

It’s safe to say that surveillance technology had a profound effect on American culture, even before Edward Snowden’s leaks arrived — there’s a sense that you can never really escape the government’s eye. If you’ve ever shared that feeling, you’ll be glad to hear that there’s finally an art exhibition devoted to exploring high-tech monitoring. The Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art’s newly opened Covert Operations is full of projects that not only protest data collection, but sometimes use it to drive their points home. Jenny Holzer’s Ribs (above) streams real US government documents on its LED displays….

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💻📧📱🌇💾💽💳📲📊🐯
Ventura’s Best Lawyer
Jay Leiderman
Please visit my homepage
JayLeiderman.com
5740 Ralston St 300
Ventura, California 93003
805-654-0200
Jay@criminal-lawyer.me

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A Buzzfeed Reporter Bugged A 21-Year-Old Sorority Girl’s iPhone For 2 Weeks

Over the course of two weeks, Katie Notopolous, a Buzzfeed reporter for Buzzfeed’s tech vertical, FWD, used software called TeenSafe to monitor the iPhone activity of a 21-year-old sorority sister named Taylor Prewitt.

She got permission from Prewitt. Prior to conducting this experiment, Notopolous had never met Prewitt.

“What story could I piece together about their life based just on a text message trail?” Notopolous wrote for Buzzfeed. “Would I actually be able to ‘know’ a person just from their phone?”

At the end of the experiment, Notopolous made a list of the things she learned about Prewitt just by monitoring her phone:

• Her dad’s a lawyer.
• She knows how to have a good time with her friends and was in a sorority.
• She’s definitely a 21-year-old American girl.
• She’s got a new boyfriend and it’s going well.
• She’s sweet, but a pushover.
• She’s open-minded with her boyfriend.
• She has a little brother in college who asks her to buy him beer occasionally.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/phone-monitoring-software-on-teen-phones-2014-9#ixzz3EExZbkCe

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JAY LEIDERMAN

JAYLEIDERMAN.COM

CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

5740 RALSTON ST 300

VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 93003

805-654-0200

JAY LEIDERMAN ATTORNEY VENTURA CALIFORNIA HACKING INTERNET FRAUD WHITE COLLAR FEDERAL GANG CRIME MEXICAN MAFIA

4Chan OUTRAGED over Emma Watson NUDE photo leak SCAM; In the immortal words of Shaggy, it wasn’t me us … amirite?

The Emma Watson nude photo leak scandal has been exposed as a spoof – by a gang of spoofers.

A mysterious “marketing firm” calling itself Rantic has been fingered as the architect of a fake threat to leak nude images of the Harry Potter starlet.

The internet was set alight this week by rumours that 4Chan nutjobs were planning to release Watson’s intimate pics as revenge for a speech she gave to the UN, in which she asked men to embrace feminism.

READ MORE

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JAY LEIDERMAN

JAYLEIDERMAN.COM

CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

5740 RALSTON ST 300

VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 93003

805-654-0200

JAY LEIDERMAN ATTORNEY VENTURA CALIFORNIA HACKING INTERNET FRAUD WHITE COLLAR FEDERAL GANG CRIME MEXICAN MAFIA

Congress moves to restrict access to data stored abroad

LEADS Act Would Limit Access to Data Stored Abroad (“Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and two of his Senate colleagues have delivered a morale boost to Microsoft Corp. in its battle against U.S. search warrants for user information stored overseas, introducing an electronic communications law update intended to clarify the limits of the government’s access to data abroad.”)

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JAY LEIDERMAN

JAYLEIDERMAN.COM

CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

5740 RALSTON ST 300

VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 93003

805-654-0200

JAY LEIDERMAN VENTURA COUNTY'S BEST CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

Bitcoin Ponzi Scheme

Businessman Operated Bitcoin Ponzi Scheme, Judge Says (“A Texas federal judge ordered a man who operated a bitcoin-based Ponzi scheme to pay $40.7 million in penalties and disgorgement.”)

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JAY LEIDERMAN

JAYLEIDERMAN.COM

CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

5740 RALSTON ST 300

VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 93003

805-654-0200

JAY LEIDERMAN VENTURA COUNTY'S BEST CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

Oklahoma loves pickles, and other revelations from Food Twitter analysis

Colorado loves watercress, Texas loves brisket and, perhaps most surprising, Oklahoma is obsessed with the pickle.

Those were the results of a recent analysis of food-related language on Twitter, conducted by a cross-disciplinary team at the University of Arizona. Combing through 3.5 million food-hashtagged tweets pulled from Twitter’s API between October 2013 and May 2014, the team identified distinctive food words for each state. Along the way, they also uncovered regional differences in the popularity of #breakfast, #brunch, #lunch, and #dinner. The midwest, apparently, is #breakfast country.

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JAY LEIDERMAN

JAYLEIDERMAN.COM

CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY

5740 RALSTON ST 300

VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 93003

805-654-0200

JAY LEIDERMAN VENTURA COUNTY'S BEST CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEY