UPDATE, November 12, 2010: Palin e-mail hacker sentenced to year in custody
A former University of Tennessee college student who hacked into Sarah Palin's e-mail during the 2008 presidential campaign was sentenced Friday to a year and a day with the judge recommending the term be served in a halfway house, not prison.
Federal Judge Thomas W. Phillips also said David Kernell, who was a 20-year-old economics major when he deduced the answers to security questions and read e-mail in Palin's private account, should get mental health treatment. Court filings said Kernell had suffered from depression since he was 11.
Kernell, who smiled when the sentence was announced, earlier apologized to Palin and her family. He said his mistake will affect him for the rest of his life.
The judge rejected a recommendation from prosecutors, who had argued for 18 months in prison. Prosecutors said outside court that they were satisfied with the sentence.
It will be up to the Bureau of Prisons to decide if Kernell is allowed to serve his term in a halfway house.
Depression.
Give me a break!
Of course Kernell smiled when he heard the sentence.
He wouldn't be smiling about his punishment if it hurt.
___________________
David Kernell, cyber-thug, was found guilty.
From the Washington Post:
A college student who hacked into Sarah Palin's e-mail account and posted some of its contents on the Internet was found guilty Friday.
The jury convicted David Kernell, 22, on two charges: unauthorized access to a computer and obstruction of justice. He was found not guilty of wire fraud, and the jury failed to reach a verdict on identity theft.
Judge Thomas Phillips declared a mistrial on the identity theft charge but did not set a date for sentencing.
Kernell was charged with breaking into Palin's e-mail while she was the Republican vice presidential candidate in 2008.
...The obstruction charge alone carries a prison sentence of up to 20 years; the misdemeanor count is punishable by up to one year in jail.
I don't expect David Kernell to spend any time in jail. I hope I'm wrong.
Video.
Read Sarah Palin's remarks on the case, posted on Facebook.
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