British hacker
Gary
McKinnon has expressed shock at the speed at which Home Secretary John Reid
has authorised his extradition to the US.
Speaking to
vnunet.com this morning,
McKinnon, who heard about Reid's decision two days ago, said: "I am not
surprised at the decision, but I am surprised at the speed of it.
"The last time a case came up under the same act, with
Babar
Ahmad, the home secretary was David Blunkett. He took 11 months to make his
decision.
"I guess John Reid has a lot of other stuff on his plate that he deems to be
more important, so he got [my case] out of the way."
British web developer Babar Ahmad faces extradition under the controversial
Extradition
Act 2003.
Last November, then Home Secretary Charles Clarke gave the go-ahead for 31
year-old to face charges in the US of running Jihadist websites. He begins his
appeal on 11 July.
McKinnon, 40, confirmed to
vnunet.com that he also
will appeal. However, he admits that he and his legal team had expected more
time to prepare.
"I was under the impression that the home secretary would have taken longer
to make a decision," McKinnon told
vnunet.com. "It's
annoying, because that would have given us more time to sort out a judicial
review."
However, McKinnon is relatively upbeat about his chances when his appeal
finally reaches the High Court.
"We do feel that we have a better chance in the appeal, because we think our
legal arguments weren't properly addressed by Nicholas Evans [the District Judge
who recommended McKinnon for extradition in May]," he told
vnunet.com.
"A higher court is a higher authority, with a well educated and experienced
judge. At least we have the chance now to take the case to that level."
McKinnon could face up to 60 years in prison if found guilty by US judges. He
stands accused of hacking into 97 US government computers, including systems
used by Nasa,
the US Army
and
The
Pentagon.
The
self-confessed
hacker, who is currently unemployed and lives in Wood Green in north London,
was arrested by the UK's
National
Hi-Tech Crime Unit in 2002.
He has consistently claimed that he broke into the US networks to look for
evidence of a cover-up of extraterrestrial technology.
McKinnon has now been fighting extradition at Bow Street Magistrates' Court
for more than two years. He and his lawyers have claimed that he could end up in
Guantanamo Bay.
A Home Office spokesman told the
BBC last night:
"Mr McKinnon had exercised his right to submit representations against return
but the secretary of state did not consider the issues raised availed Mr
McKinnon."
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