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Security The Courts IT

Man Threatened Company With Cyber Attack To Fire Employee and Hire Him Instead (bleepingcomputer.com) 151

An anonymous reader writes: A North Carolina judge sentenced a Washington man this week to 37 months in prison for threatening a company with attacks unless they fire one of their employees and hire him instead. According to court documents obtained by Bleeping Computer, on April 18, 2016, Todd Michael Gori sent an email to TSI Healthcare, a healthcare software vendor based in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Gori, a 28-year-old resident of Wenatchee, Washington, threatened the company with cyber attacks by him and unnamed friends if the company did not fire one of its employees and hire him instead.

"I am giving you, TSI healthcare two choices," Gori wrote in the email. "You either lay-off [identity redacted] and replace her with me, an operator 100x better that she is oppressing. Or I will take out your entire company along with my comrades via a cyber attack. Again you have two choices. Get ride of her and hire me. Or slowly be chipped away at until you are gone. She is a horrible operator that can only manage 2 screens with an over inflated travel budget. I fly at least 10x as many places as this loon on 1/5th of the budget," the email reads. "I have petitioned for a job with you guys with her as a reference as I am a felon with computer skills and need assistance getting work as technically I have 'no work history'. She declines everytime and burries me even further."

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Man Threatened Company With Cyber Attack To Fire Employee and Hire Him Instead

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  • That has to be a joke. No one could be that stupid. Right?

    Apparently I have too high of an opinion of humanity.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @01:10PM (#55804773)

      The problem is not the stupid, although that is impressive. The problem is the completely unwarranted inflated sense of his own skills. A Dunning-Kruger example case.

      • You either lay-off [identity redacted] and replace her with me, an operator 100x better that she is oppressing. ...
        I fly at least 10x as many places as this loon on 1/5th of the budget,

        Unwar*anted perhaps, but at least he's trying to be quantifiable. They should at least give him the chance to show his work in getting those numbers.

        * 'r' removed to make up for the extra one in TFS

        • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

          by prefec2 ( 875483 )

          He is not trustworthy. I will not employ a person with a questionable character. No company wants that (except from the upper management). Interestingly the US population thought a narcissist asshole with limited intellect but unlimited self-interest will be beneficial for the country.

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by PPH ( 736903 )

            Well, he is upper management.

            QED.

          • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Monday December 25, 2017 @02:01PM (#55804981)

            "He is not trustworthy. I will not employ a person with a questionable character."

            Fuck the character. I'm a grammar-Nazi and I wouldn't hire him for that reason alone.

            • I was wondering why he wanted to take out his comrades if he didn't get the job. I thought if anything that they might have helped him.

          • "...[A]n operator 100x better that she is..." If somebody else had not been convicted of this, I would have thought it was Donald Trump. He makes a boast that cannot be proven or is not true. If it was Trump, he could have been trying to get a job in case he has to leave his current one early.
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by fredrated ( 639554 )

            Actually, the us population picked Hillary. elites of the electoral college pick the orangutan.

            • Actually, the us population picked Hillary. elites of the electoral college pick the orangutan.

              ....because the only legitimate elections are the ones leftists win....

              Your 'champion' had feet of clay and should have known the rules of the game just as well as Trump. She played for a popular vote win, which she got, but a popular vote win doesn't get the presidency. Further, California alone tipped the scales for the popular vote- and they're not too particular about who they let vote.

              That's pretty much the reason for the electoral college in the first place- so that California doesn't (or a few large

              • The electoral college exists because, when the country was formed, less--populous states knew very well that giving all citizens equal say would result in their minority voice getting overpowered by the much greater numbers who would disagree with them. We have a word for this: We call it 'democracy.'

                • We have a word for this: We call it 'democracy.'

                  Unless we've been to a better school. Then we call it Republic, or representative republic if we're more pedantic.

                • I agree with your viewpoint. I think we should immediately disband the institution that lets those states have equal representation, at the expense of true democracy. We should fold the House of Representatives and the Senate into one chamber, with the current members each simply having one vote apiece. Of course, the filibuster rule would be abolished too, since that allows the minority population to prevent the majority from having a vote.

                  Yes comrade, I like this new equal representation you advocate. Ple

                  • The bicameral system was based upon the English house of commons and house of lords, but adapted to a representative democracy. The idea is to provide some more stability to government - the senators stick around. Otherwise you'd end up with a government constantly in flux, as a new party takes over every few years and sets about burning down everything the last accomplished.

                    Actually, it doesn't sound like it works after all.

            • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • You either lay-off [identity redacted] and replace her with me, an operator 100x better that she is oppressing. ... I fly at least 10x as many places as this loon on 1/5th of the budget,

          Unwar*anted perhaps, but at least he's trying to be quantifiable. They should at least give him the chance to show his work in getting those numbers.

          I'd like to know how he flies 10x as many places on 1/5th the budget - is he also a travel agent, own a plane, sleep in his rental car? Also how is *she* oppressing him - as opposed to the company? [ Can't wait to hear his justifications for better treatment from his fellow inmates in prison. ]

      • Could have used a link for the Dunning-Kruger [wikipedia.org] reference. I'd never heard of it before. Now I know how to describe a certain politician.
      • Just think, in about 35 months he can tell other prisons about his impressive skills at making license plates.
    • Don't put down the next US president. After he gets out he has plenty of time to get a campaign going for 2024.

  • Not sure how he got 100x better than her, with no work history.
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @01:19PM (#55804823)

      Not sure how he got 100x better than her, with no work history.

      He may have been exaggerating, but even if he is really only 10x better, he would still be a great employee.

      He is likely very good, since he clearly doesn't waste time on silly trivialities like grammar, spelling, and coherent thinking, leaving more time to get important stuff done.

      • by prefec2 ( 875483 )

        He is obviously unable to understand social conventions. Therefore, he is not able to work with others. Thus he can either become US president or stay out of any other office where he has to compromise. That is stay unemployed. Instead of sending him to prison, they should send him into a mental institution helping him to grow up and become a productive part of society.

        • by lucm ( 889690 )

          He is obviously unable to understand social conventions.

          I suspect he is also unable to understand sarcasm.

    • Well, they don't let you count what landed you in jail as work history, now do they?

  • by Rick Zeman ( 15628 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @01:09PM (#55804763)

    "Sure, I'll hire you because you've proven yourself to be so ethical..."

    Snort. That's as moronic as the guy who just tried to rob a bank by writing the note on one of his checks...and then leaving it with the teller.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The number of people that are really incapable but think they have it all figured out is apparently on the raise. Sure, most humans have been idiots throughout history, but whether they know it or think themselves some kind of genius is more environment-dependent. I guess we are seeing the front of the wave of children that have all been told they are special.

    • Sadly, it wasn't A guy that did that. It was several guys, although deposit slips are used more than checks. I would like to say that this represents the absolute apex of knuckleheadedness in bank robbery, but it actually gets worse.

    • The first Nigerian scam email I received mentioned that I was known to be honest and trustworthy, and therefore ideal for their illegal scheme. It amused me.

  • by orlanz ( 882574 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @01:14PM (#55804799)

    He is a ex-felon and this having trouble getting a job. So he comes up with an idea to get back in jail, picking on a company who declined his resume a few times.

    He did not seem to have hurt anyone, but only threatened them (with gun violence too). And he got 3 years worth of meals on the tax payers dime.

    Mission accomplished?

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      He did not seem to have hurt anyone, but only threatened them (with gun violence too). And he got 3 years worth of meals on the tax payers dime.
      Mission accomplished?

      Even there he failed at being efficient at the task.

      He could have just wrote to the parole board the first time that he hates humanity and wants let out early to get a head start on making everyone pay.

      Then he wouldn't have had this period of unemployment to solve, all while still seeming like the go-getter he claims to be!

  • by dschnur ( 61074 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @01:26PM (#55804849)
    Without any other supporting evidence, It seems like there are some mental deficits in play. I'm not even going to grace the preceding statement by calling it a hypothesis, however, on the surface it looks like the only reason the story is relevant to /. is because the label "cyber" has been attached to a generic threat from a person who might be better off in an in-patient care facility instead of prison.
  • Yeah, I wonder why? Blackmail a company over a gripe and tell them exactly who you are as well. I mean thats just savant level criminal genius, right?

  • Man Threatened Company With Cyber Attack To Fire Employee and Hire Him Instead

    I find myself lacking words that can adequately describe just how stupid that idea is.

  • I've been doing IT work for over 20 years, and all this time it has been an uphill battle to get our chosen field taken seriously. People like this are a big contributor to the problem IMO. I could definitely see offshore outsourcing firms using examples like this as scare tactics when trying to take over a company's IT department. "Mr. Executive, our loyal staff will do the needful 24/7 with zero complaints and zero chance of your company ending up in the news like this." -- or something like that.

    I think

  • by WolfgangVL ( 3494585 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @03:52PM (#55805489)

    All these comments are cracking at how incredibly stupid this guy is. I read incredibly desperate.

    It's all smiles and wit when we talk about wealth in the USA, eat the rich, French revolution... ect.

    Here is a real example of a skilled worker being excluded from the work force on account of Felon status. Keep sitting back and watching with your 5 dollar coffee and cable TV folks. Might as well heat up the popcorn while your at it. Expect more of this sort of thing.

    I wonder how many times a year this sort of thing happens in the non-tech sector. This dude is going back to prison, and his family just learned what side of the coin their really on.

    People are getting desperate. People are getting more hungry, and people are getting violent. Those people doing the excluding? Their buying the land and driving up the COL everywhere while looking down their noses at everybody else and trying to figure out "the homeless problem"

    We're on the express train to desperate violence folks. Look around at the world. Step outside your little bubble and actually look at whats going on. This guy aint stupid. He's desperate, and so are MANY more.

    When the shoe finally drops, it's going to be something to behold.

    • TLDR

      No. He's just stupid.

      • He can be both. It is true that felons have great difficulty in finding employment. They have to disclose to any employer that they are a felon, and in almost all cases this results in their application being instantly thrown in the trash - plenty of people looking for work with a clean record. Unless they have a personal friend who will pull a few strings for them, chances of getting into employment are slim. Is it any surprise that some of them conclude they have no choice but to return to crime to suppor

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Desperate and stupid are not mutually exclusive.

    • by lucm ( 889690 )

      Step outside your little bubble and actually look at whats going on. This guy aint stupid. He's desperate, and so are MANY more.

      What about the lady he stalked and tried to get fired? The one who is not a felon and who did nothing wrong? Maybe you're the one who needs to step outside your little bubble.

    • They're the ones who voted for the situation to continue, despite the rest of us trying to tell them voting for tax cuts for the rich won't help them get rich. Maybe they should start listening and stop betting on winning the lottery and avoiding the tax.
  • I'm surprised this didn't work. Where did Todd slip up?
  • by Picodon ( 4937267 ) on Monday December 25, 2017 @06:25PM (#55806085)

    To me, this story is mostly a symptom that our society needs a bit more (probably, a lot more) mental health care. I don’t mean it in a disparaging way. I feel sincere pity for him. The guy wrote that he is a felon, so he’s probably done jail time; and his writing reveals obvious (and serious) psychological problems. I find it unfortunate that we cannot do better with (or rather, for) people like that. Mental health troubles can be debilitating (particularly, socially debilitating) and lead too many to jail.

    Don’t get me wrong, I understand the value of personal responsibility. For example, I might get offended if someone bumps into me. But not if it’s a blind person! Unfortunately, psychological problems are (comparatively) more difficult to recognise, understand and (importantly for the legal system) confirm (and measure), so we often handle them using the expedient and cheaper device, the discard pile. This might come from insufficient scientific understanding of those conditions, and limited medical ability to treat them. But I’m afraid that it may also reflect a lack of compassion and generosity on our part, and probably a lack of vision and good judgement as well, since we’re likely ignoring a good investment.

  • The joke used to be that "you should act your age, not your shoe size". Of course, since we switched to using standard shoe sizes (typically numbers in the 30s or 40s) instead of our little country's parochial system (numbers around 10), that joke had to change. Now we use "act your IQ, not your shoe size.

    This person is clearly doing both - IQ and shoe size in the same low numerical range.

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