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Notes From a Prison Visit With Weev 2.0

John and Tim Rigas snagged the sole attorney visit room before us.  (The prison guards told me there’s not a lot of attorney visits at the prison.)  It ended up not being that big of a deal and we all just sat out in the general visitors room and talked.  We fed weev with the “food” available from the vending machines. Weev is no longer in the special housing unit.  Despite the prison having found him guilty of violating his phone and computer privileges and sentencing him to more solitary they put him back in the general population after we started to gear up to litigate and made some noise.  When they first put him back in the general population, however, they gave him a work schedule that only allowed him to get four hours of sleep a night.  They pulled this off by giving him a kitchen work shift from 4:30 am to 12:30pm.  When he finished his work shift he was unable to sleep because, as a punishment for refusing to pay restitution through his commissary fund to the government, they put his cell at the front of the block where it is extremely noisy due to inmate activity outside the block.  Consequently, the only time he was able to sleep was between lights out (midnight) and the beginning of his shift. The day we visited they’d just moved him to a day work shift so he is now able to get sleep.  A pattern seems to be emerging where the prison takes punitive measures against him, we threaten action, the prison corrects its behavior, but then finds new and creative ways to mess with weev.  It’s like a game of whack-a-mole.  Nonetheless, he looked much better than the last time I saw him when I had to talk to him behind plate glass and he was in the orange jump suit you have to wear when you’re in the special housing unit. Weev gets most of his mail but gets it after a significant delay.  Some mail isn’t reaching him at all, mainly from certain prominent people in the info-sec community.  He gets the Wall Street Journal daily (it’s his favorite paper, deal with it), the Economist, as well as the New Scientist.  People are sending him copious amounts of books but he has to give many of them away to other inmates because the prison brings him ten days worth of books at once, an amount that usually exceeds his five book limit. So as soon as he receives his books he’s ordered to get rid of some of them. Interestingly, weev still has access to computers for legal research.  The only computer use he’s being denied is access to the federal prison email system. So basically he’s allowed to use computers but not for speech.  His phone privileges are still suspended until the end of December. All in all, weev is holding up well given his situation.  As I visit him more I will post more updates. -Tor U.S. v. Auernheimimer, No. 13-1816 (3d Cir. 2013) U.S. v. Auernheimer, 11-CR-470 (D.N.J. 2012) (SDW)]]]]> ]]>

Road to Nowhere

In Liminae: The Road to Nowhere

It takes us about six hours to drive to the rural state jail (that’s owned by two judges) the Feds contracted with to hold our client. Accused of computer crimes, he can’t effectively review evidence in jail – there’s no practical access to computers in the gulag. They’ve seized all his assets claiming they’re the ill-gotten gains of crimes the government can’t identify, and their computer forensics – if you can call them that – have no scientific basis and are full of basic errors and typos. In my decade as a federal criminal defense lawyer doing computer cases across the country, I’ve never come across a case where the government was so completely off.

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Guilty Until Proven Innocent

A defendant’s view from the trenches of federal criminal court This post is originally published to Substack. You can read and follow us there. https://torekeland.substack.com/p/guilty-until-proven-innocent

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