James Linton (hacker)

Last updated

James Linton
NationalityBritish
Other namesSINON_REBORN
OccupationEmail threat researcher
Known forEmail pranks

James Linton is a social engineer and email prankster known for duping high-profile celebrities and politicians. For five months in 2016 through to 2017, the "lazy anarchist" [1] known by the Twitter alias SINON_REBORN created over 150 look-alike email accounts and emailed high-profile individuals in the political, financial, and entertainment industries from his iPhone 7. [2]

Contents

Background

Linton is a former designer and front end web developer. He was suspended from his job when his bosses suspected he was emailing victims at work. [2] He lives in Manchester with his partner and three cats. [3]

His moniker SINON_REBORN comes from Sinon, the name of the Greek Soldier who persuades the Trojans to accept the Trojan Horse, basis of the eponymous computing trick he utilised. [4]

He revealed his identity to the media in September 2017 and later became a threat researcher and speaker for email security firm Agari. [5]

Prank spree

In May 2017, Linton began his spree with Jes Staley, CEO of Barclays as chairman John McFarlane, who he pranked with an acrostic alluding to whistleblower investigation. [6] Days later, he sent sexist remarks to Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England and an invitation to a fake soiree. [7] This led to a tightening of Barclay's email security procedures. [8] [9]

In June, impersonating Jeremy Corbyn's press secretary, British politician Diane Abbott was tricked into commenting about her health. [10]

Shortly after, he tricked Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs into making a dig at president Trump, Citigroup banking chiefs Michael Corbat and Stephen Bird with links to his previous pranks then corresponded with James Gorman, CEO of Morgan Stanley. [11]

In late June, right-wing media personality Katie Hopkins, was tricked into joining a fictional TV show "Adders Basket" debating feminists, liberals and vegans. [5]

In August, he targeted the White House. Posing as Jared Kushner he tricked a senior cyber security advisor into his authenticity, taunted then media chief Anthony Scaramucci as ex chief of staff Reince Priebus just before he was fired, [12] invited US Homeland Security Advisor Tom Bossert to a soiree, and joked with Eric Trump about his dad's similarities to Putin. [13] Personal lawyer to Donald Trump Michael Cohen was persuaded to tweet a photograph with a hidden gif [2] and Jared Kushner's lawyer Abbe Lowell incorrectly forwarded a request from the senate intelligence committee asking about Kushner's undisclosed private email account to a fake account. [14] Lawyer Ty Cobb and press secretary Sarah Sanders corresponded, joking about droning journalist Natasha Bertrand. [15]

In early August, former UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd briefly corresponded from her personal address about upcoming announcements to a fake advisor account. [4] [16]

Later in August, Breitbart editors Alex Marlow and Joel Pollak commented they would do Steve Bannon's 'dirty work' to fake a Steve Bannon account, ousting Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump and shared a personal smear about their private lives. [17]

In September, former United States Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick briefly fell for fake emails from her client Jared Kushner but didn't reveal anything confidential. [18]

In October, Linton posing as now disgraced Hollywood Producer Harvey Weinstein, confessing regrets for his actions to his former lawyers Lanny Davis and Lisa Bloom. [19]

Later in October, he targeted Shark Tank personality Robert Herjavec as the company CEO, inviting him to a toga party. Later the fake account was copied into official financial projection documents. [2]

In late October, UK National Cyber Security Centre technical director Dr Ian Levy was targeted with a fake industry event, however Levy correctly identified the unexpected link to mail.com. [4] Linton was then asked by Levy to co-write a blog about the experience. [20]

Linton's last prank was targeting conservative media pundit Ann Coulter, posing as Sheriff David Clarke persuading her to review an article about immigration. [21]

Other pranks

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