Crime Jailed BreachForums creator, admin sentenced to 20 years of supervised release - Conor Fitzpatrick created and ran a notorious website used to facilitate online crime and leak sensitive data.

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Conor Fitzpatrick, the creator and administrator of the BreachForums cybercrime website, was sentenced to 20 years of supervised release Friday.

A federal judged deemed that the first two years of the 20-year sentence will be served as home confinement, according to a sentencing document posted Friday. Fitzpatrick will have no access to the internet for the first year of his home confinement and must register with state sex offender registries.

Fitzpatrick, 21, was originally arrested March 15, 2023, at his family’s hope in Peekskill, N.Y., and admitted to owning and operating BreachForums under the “pompompurin” moniker, according to court records. He was released on a $300,000 bond, but was arrested again on Jan. 2 of this year for violating the conditions of his pretrial release by using a computer without the required monitoring software and using virtual private network (VPN) services.

Fitzpatrick launched BreachForums in March 2022 in the wake of the law enforcement takedown of RaidForums, another popular cybercrime marketplace.

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Conor Fitzpatrick [aka @pomp] (Courtesy Alexandria Sheriff’s Office)


Prosecutors in the Eastern District of Virginia sought to imprison Fitzpatrick for 188 months — nearly 16 years — based on the nearly 900 stolen databases, comprising over 14 billion individual records, that were made available to members of the BreachForums website, according to court documents filed earlier this month. Additionally, prosecutors said, at the time of his arrest “he knowingly possessed approximately 26 video files containing visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct, including videos depicting prepubescent minors.”

Fitzpatrick’s attorneys filed their own sentencing recommendation memo under seal, citing “confidential and medical information that the public would not, under any other circumstances, be entitled to see.”

Fitzpatrick pleaded guilty on July 13, 2023, to conspiracy to commit access device fraud, solicitation for the purpose of offering access devices, and possession of child pornography, according to court records.

“By creating a platform for hackers and fraudsters to connect and conduct business, the defendant made it possible for BreachForums members to commit exponentially more crimes and more sophisticated crimes than any could have done alone,” prosecutors wrote in the memo, adding that the “criminal activity on BreachForums touched nearly ever sector of U.S. society.”

Notable incidents cited by prosecutors in the sentencing recommendation memo included a leak in December 2022 of data pertaining to some 87,760 members of InfraGuard, records related to 200 million users of a U.S.-based social media company and 20 million user records for a company that controls background check services in January 2023, and the posting of tens of thousands of users’s private health insurance information, including members of Congress, in March 2023.

The sentencing recommendation memo also noted multiple instances in which Fitzpatrick served as a middle man for transactions involving stolen data and, in at least one case, advised a BreachForums member on how to monetize stolen data. In another instance, according to prosecutors, Fitzpatrick told a forum user that he would provide falsified information to law enforcement, but said he doubted that “law enforcement would even bother making legal requests to a hacking forum lmao.”

Although inactive for a period of several months, BreachForums was resurrected in June 2023 by a former administrator who worked under Fitzpatrick, and the site quickly reestablished itself as a top English-language cybercrime marketplace. That version of the site remains active.

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You can see my community post here, but he was also a Kiwifarms member (@pomp). He was banned from the forum as well for being a nonce.
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Was a great website, a godsend after Raidforums went down. Much of the shit posted on there was not even remotely 'stolen', but things like state voter lists downloaded from public (if obscure) government FTP sites, or purchased on CDROM via some stupid FOIA type process that was set up to make it easy for big data brokers to get everyone's data and then monetize it, but inconvenient for regular people.

As for the breaches cited in the article... InfraGuard is a programme where companies voluntarily spy for the FBI. Anyone involved deserves far worse than doxing.

Sad to see him go down for this. Don't believe the CP claims for a moment.
He musta pissed of someone Federal. It's pretty unusual for the Feds to interfere in a plea deal.
He didn't have a plea deal. He pled guilty without one and got a (already excessive) sentence that the fed scum aren't happy with.
 
Seems pretty stupid to host a site explicitly to host hacked materials, but then again he looks pretty stupid.
 
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Don't believe the CP claims for a moment.

I don’t know that I would go this far, personally (unless you have some information we don’t.) My glowdar goes off a bit for being arrested for, among other things, having sensitive information on members of congress, and then finding CSAM after the fact. But that’s not a slippery slope I’m going anywhere near. Besides, the punishment for pedos is so lenient in this country that it’s practically negligible.
 
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No. He's only had one trial that ended in a plea.

He had a trial that ended with a plea that the prosecution and the judge agreed with, and now the government is appealing it?

I don't get it, if the government didn't want to give him that plea, why did the judge and government prosecutor agree to it?
 
He had a trial that ended with a plea that the prosecution and the judge agreed with, and now the government is appealing it?
Also he pled guilty. Then they actually argued about the sentence. And the judge spat this out.

And yes, the government can appeal a sentence. Otherwise any activist judge could just decide they're giving probation to anyone who murders for antifa, or something like that, and it would be beyond review.

The government did not agree to this, and argued for a much harsher sentence.
 
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He had a trial that ended with a plea that the prosecution and the judge agreed with, and now the government is appealing it?

I don't get it, if the government didn't want to give him that plea, why did the judge and government prosecutor agree to it?
You
Can
Plead
Guilty
Without
A
Plea
Deal

(However, I'm not surprised that people in s**thole countries like the US are not aware of this)
 
You
Can
Plead
Guilty
Without
A
Plea
Deal

(However, I'm not surprised that people in s**thole countries like the US are not aware of this)
You can, sure, but what's the point? Yeah if it's something where you almost certainly will get a couple days in jail and a fine and then go back to your job it could be worth it, but otherwise defending yourself is almost always the better option.
 
“he knowingly possessed approximately 26 video files containing visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct, including videos depicting prepubescent minors.”
You don't say...
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Connor Fitzpatrick and Patrick Fitzconnor, the queerest pair you ever did ponder.
Why do these hackers always look so retarded
View attachment 5649655
If you're drowning in pussy and used to being a high achiever, you're not going to have time to be a cloistered geek. Being a loser frees up a lot of time. I like to sew tiny hats for my Warhammer action figures. There are dismembered Barbie heads everywhere.
 
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