LONDON (AP) — A British teenager has been jailed for two years for compromising the email and phone accounts of senior U.S. government officials in what a judge called acts of "cyber-terrorism."
Prosecutors say that in 2015-16, Kane Gamble conned call centers into revealing information that got him into the accounts of then-FBI director Mark Giuliano, then-Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, then-CIA chief John Brennan and other top officials.
They say Gamble, who was part of a group of hackers called "Crackas With Attitude," leaked some of the information he gathered online.
Gamble pleaded guilty at a hearing last year.
The 18-year-old was sentenced Friday at London's Central Criminal Court to two years in youth detention.
Judge Charles Haddon-Cave said his "nasty campaign of politically motivated cyber-terrorism" had left victims feeling violated.