NEW: Pro-Trump Hackers Threaten To Reveal Docs From Fulton County Case
A collective of computer hackers has set a Saturday deadline for authorities to comply with various demands or face the release of confidential documents from President Donald Trump’s ongoing case in Fulton County, Georgia.
The group, which previously took the website for District Attorney Fani Wills offline for several hours, is threatening to release documents obtained from within the state’s court system unless it is paid a ransom, according to Business Insider.
In a message posted online Saturday, in both English and Russian, the hacking group called LockBit said the stolen documents “contain a lot of interesting things and Donald Trump’s court cases that could affect the upcoming US election.”
Initially, LockBit set a Saturday, March 2, deadline for the payment, according to the cybersecurity reporter Brian Krebs.
It has since moved up that deadline to 8:49 a.m. ET on Thursday, February 29, LockBit’s restored website shows.
The collective, run by a hacker using the pseudonym LockBitSupp, has previously been targeted and marginally disrupted by the FBI before reconvening after a February 20th online raid by law enforcement.
In an online statement teasing the release of documents, LockBitSupp warned that the FBI acted so quickly to disrupt his organization because of the sensitive nature of Willis’ criminal case against Trump. The hacker teased the FBI for failing to stop him the first time and said he is a fan of the former president.