Yesterday’s court appearance by Pirate Bay founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg was a familiar affair.
Once again, the bulk of the proceedings were held behind closed doors and the outcome for the Swedish hacker was the same: another four-week extension of his detention.
The Frederiksberg City Court ruled that Warg should be held an additional four weeks while police continue their investigation. Warg’s co-defendant, a 20-year-old Dane, received a two-week extension. Both maintain their innocence.
READ MORE: Case against Anakata is "thin", lawyer says
In custody since November
Warg, known in online circles as Anakata, has been held on remand since his extradition from Sweden on November 28. He and his co-defendant are suspected of hacking into a public database controlled by the IT firm CSC and accessing sensitive data from the driving licence database, a register of wanted persons in the Schengen Area, and passwords to police officer’s email accounts.
According to Politiken newspaper, the prosecutor presented evidence yesterday that the personal information has been found on servers in various countries.
Warg’s lawyer, Luise Høj, has previously characterised the case against Anakata as “thin” and has criticised the closed-door nature of the proceedings.
“The prosecutor has so far argued that the case is sensitive and that the hearings should be held behind closed doors, but I don’t think that the things we are discussing are particularly delicate, and it would be good for the Danish people to see what is really going on in this case,” Høj told The Copenhagen Post last month.
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Conflict amongst supporters
While Warg will face at least another month in custody, his supporters claim that a successful online petition was never delivered to PM Helle Thorning-Schmidt as planned due to “a traitor” amongst their ranks.
A ‘Free Anakata’ spokesperson said that the person behind the petition never submitted it as promised and attempted to mine the email addresses of signees for his own use. The ‘Free Anakata’ group also says that the same individual is attempting to solicit donations for Warg despite friends and family of Anakata, including his mother Kristina Svartholm, repeatedly stating that Warg neither needs nor wants financial assistance.
“As everyone should already know, the Free Anakata movement does NOT accept any donations or any funds being raised in Anakata’s name,” the group wrote in a statement. “He has free legal help! He also does NOT need any money, neither would he accept any money from his supporters.”