A New Hampshire man was sentenced today to 96 months in
prison for remotely hacking into the online accounts of dozens of teenaged
female victims and sending them threatening online communications, in some
instances containing sexually explicit photos, in order to force the victims to
send him sexually explicit photos of themselves.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Emily Rice of the
District of New Hampshire and Resident Agent in Charge Tim Benitez of the U.S.
Secret Service’s Manchester, New Hampshire, Field Office made the announcement.
Ryan J. Vallee, 23, formerly of Laconia, New Hampshire, was
sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Paul J. Barbadoro of the District of New
Hampshire. Vallee pleaded guilty on Aug.
25, 2016, to a 31-count superseding indictment charging him with 13 counts of
making interstate threats, one count of computer hacking to steal information,
eight counts of computer hacking to extort, eight counts of aggravated identity
theft and one count of cyberstalking. On
March 16, 2016, while Vallee was awaiting trial, he was re-arrested on new
criminal charges and has remained in custody since then. The names of the victims are being withheld
from the public to protect their privacy.
According to admissions made in connection with his plea and
evidence presented at sentencing, from 2011 through March 2016, Vallee, using
various aliases that included “Seth Williams” and “James McRow,” engaged in a
computer hacking and “sextortion” campaign designed to force dozens of teenaged
victims – many of which he personally knew – to provide him with sexually
explicit photographs of themselves and others.
Vallee employed a variety of techniques to force his victims
to cede to his “sextortionate” demands.
For example, according to the plea agreement, he repeatedly hacked into
and took control over the victims’ online accounts, including their email,
Facebook and Instagram accounts. Once he
had control of these accounts, Vallee locked the victims out of their own
accounts and, in some cases, defaced the contents of the accounts, he
admitted. In at least one instance,
Vallee hacked into a victim’s Amazon.com account, which stored her payment
information and shipping address, then ordered items of a sexual nature and had
them shipped to the victim’s home.
Vallee also admitted that in some instances, he obtained sexually
explicit photos of the victims and their friends and distributed them to the
victims, their friends and their family members. With at least one victim, Vallee created a
Facebook page using an account name that was virtually identical to the
victim’s real Facebook account name, with one letter misspelled, he
admitted. He then posted sexually
explicit photos of the victim on this fake Facebook page and issued “friend
requests” to the victim, her friends and her family members, according to the
plea agreement.
Vallee admitted that he repeatedly sent threatening
electronic communications to his victims, usually by using spoofing or
anonymizing text message services, in which he threatened his victims that
unless they gave him sexually explicit photographs of themselves, he would
continue with the above-described conduct.
According to the admissions in the plea agreement, when most of the
victims refused to comply with Vallee’s demands and begged him to leave them
alone, Vallee responded with threats to inflict additional harm.
The U.S. Secret Service investigated the case with
substantial assistance from the Belmont Police Department. Senior Trial Attorney Mona Sedky of the
Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and
Assistant U.S. Attorney Arnold H. Huftalen of the District of New Hampshire
prosecuted the case.
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