Tennessee man pleads guilty to hacking Supreme Court filing system and posting stolen data online

Nicholas Moore pleaded guilty to hacking the Supreme Court’s filing system and other government platforms, posting victims’ data on Instagram; sentencing set for April 17.

Overview

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1.

Who: Nicholas Moore, 24, of Springfield, Tennessee, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor computer fraud charge after repeatedly accessing government computer systems using stolen credentials.

2.

What: Prosecutors say Moore hacked the U.S. Supreme Court’s electronic filing system on 25 days in 2023 and accessed AmeriCorps and VA MyHealtheVet records.

3.

How: He used credentials stolen from authorized users to log into accounts, then posted names, filing records, contact details and health information on an Instagram account.

4.

Where/When: The crimes occurred across federal systems, including the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., in 2023; Moore pleaded guilty in federal court in Washington, D.C.

5.

Why/penalty: Moore faces up to one year in prison and a $100,000 fine under the misdemeanor charge; sentencing is scheduled for April 17.

Written using shared reports from
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Analysis

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Center-leaning sources present the story as criminal wrongdoing that victimizes individuals, using mildly loaded verbs ('boasted') and emphasizing intimate data exposures (names, DOB, addresses, health info). They prioritize the court filing and watchdog tip (Court Watch) while structuring the piece to foreground victims’ harms before legal penalties, shaping a law-and-order narrative.

Sources (3)

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FAQ

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Nicholas Moore hacked the U.S. Supreme Court’s electronic filing system, AmeriCorps' computer servers, and the Department of Veterans Affairs' MyHealtheVet platform.

He used stolen credentials from authorized users to log into the accounts.

He posted victims' names, filing records, contact details, health information, and screenshots on Instagram under the handle @ihackedthegovernment.

He faces up to one year in prison and a $100,000 fine for the misdemeanor computer fraud charge; sentencing is scheduled for April 17.

The hacks into the Supreme Court system occurred on 25 different days in 2023; the crimes involved federal systems including those in Washington, D.C.

History

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