Pirate Bay founder extradited from Sweden

Pirate Bay founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg is suspected of hacking into a public database and stealing social security numbers, but police have so far not released the charges against him

Swedish hacker Gottfrid Svartholm Warg has been succesfully extradited from Sweden and will be charged in court today, reports DR Nyheder.

Warg – founder of the notorious file-sharing service the Pirate Bay – is suspected stealing social security numbers from the police’s driving licence register which is held in a database controlled by IT firm CSC.

Copenhagen Police head prosecutor Dorit Borgaard would not say what Warg is being charged with, however, he is presented in court.

READ MORE: Swedish hacker pleads against extradition

Convicted in Sweden
Warg’s extradition follows a successful prosecution in Sweden for hacking in to Swedish IT firm Logica, a public agency that stores data for that country’s public registry.

Svea Court of Appeal acquitted him of hacking into the bank Nordea, however, and reduced his sentence to one year.

Before his extradition, Warg sent an open letter to the justice minister, Morten Bødskov (S), arguing that his successful appeal demonstrated that he could not be held responsible, despite the fact his computer was implicated in the crime.

Fought the extradition
"I sincerely apologise that my computer has been used in a way that has caused damage to Denmark [and] I am convinced that it would be a waste of both financial and human resources to continue the trial against me in Denmark, after the Svea Court of Appeal reached its verdict," Warg wrote.

But Borgaard argued that there was still sufficient evidence to charge him for the CSC attack.

"If he really couldn't be held responsible for what his computer was used for, then the Swedish court would have aquitted him of all charges against him, not just the Nordea case," Borgaard told Berlingske newspaper.

A 20-year-old Dane has also been arrested in connection with the case.

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