• Journalist Timothy Burke indicted on federal conspiracy charge

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    Federal prosecutors charged journalist and media consultant Timothy Burke
    with 14 federal crimes — including conspiracy — in an indictment that was unsealed Thursday.

    Burke, 45, was arrested Thursday morning, the Tampa Bay Times reported. He
    was set to appear in federal court in Tampa later Thursday afternoon.

    Burke's lawyer, Mark Rasch, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on behalf of his client.

    The indictment accuses Burke and an unnamed co-conspirator of carrying out
    a plan, which began around February 2022 and continued until May 2023, to illegally obtain and then distribute “electronic items” found on protected computers and servers, including materials from “a multinational media
    company headquartered in New York City, New York.”

    Initially filed on Feb. 15 and unsealed Thursday, the indictment says
    Burke "played multiple roles in the conspiracy, including utilizing
    compromised credentials to gain unauthorized access to protected
    computers, scouring those protected computers for electronic items and information, obtaining and stealing electronic items and information
    deemed desirable, organizing and exploiting some of those electronic items
    and information, and intercepting and disclosing the contents of wire,
    oral, and/or electronic video communications."

    Burke and the co-conspirator discussed their plans on Twitter direct
    message and through Google accounts, according to the indictment. They
    then allegedly obtained "compromised credentials" to access protected computers, repeatedly, in order to acquire and steal materials from those devices before sharing them with others.

    The pair then covered their tracks, messing with the downloaded content to
    make it appear as though it did not originate from the program, accessed illegally by Burke and his co-conspirator, according to the indictment.

    The indictment does not detail exactly what the files contained, but the
    Tampa Bay Times reported that the content included “protected commercial broadcast video streams” that were stolen and leaked.

    NBC News has not verified the reports.

    The Tampa Bay Times reported that Thursday’s unsealed indictment of Burke
    could be connected to an ongoing criminal investigation into leaked behind-the-scenes videos from Fox News that feature Tucker Carlson and the rapper formerly known as Kanye West.

    The Times reported that in May, FBI agents searched Burke’s Seminole
    Heights, Florida, home as part of the investigation, taking electronic
    devices and computers used for his media consulting business.

    A July 2023 letter from Burke's lawyer to an assistant U.S. attorney
    related to the May seizure mentioned the interview between Carlson and
    West.

    "It was embarrassing because Mr. Burke was able to find and expose
    information about the Carlson/West interview," the letter said. Fox News
    "was embarrassed because it had made those feeds available to the public
    in a way that Mr. Burke could -- and did -- find them and disseminate
    them."

    The letter to the prosecutor, which was posted on Burke's legal fund
    website and is included in court documents related to the seizure, claimed
    that the live feeds were part of Burke's journalistic work, calling the
    feeds his "'Pentagon Papers' if the Pentagon Papers were not classified,
    and were obtained lawfully."

    Burke, in a separate court filing, explained how he accessed the streams.
    He said a "confidential source" had pointed him in the direction of publicly-posted credentials that would get him into the streaming
    platform.

    When he was logged in, the platform "automatically downloaded to Burke’s computer a list of the URL’s of other active live streams on the site,"
    the filing said, allowing Burke to view and download "the unencrypted, broadcast, publicly accessible, Internet addressable live feeds —
    including those of Fox News."

    "Burke 'hacked' no website, 'stole' no credentials, and violated no terms
    of service," the filing said. "He merely found something newsworthy on a publicly accessible site."

    Neither Fox, Carlson nor West were mentioned in Thursday’s indictment, but
    the indictment does state Burke accessed a video stream of an “interview discussion between show host and guest” on Oct. 6, 2022, which is the same
    day Carlson interviewed West on his now-canceled Fox News show. The Tampa
    Bay Times first reported that detail.

    The indictment also alleges Burke accessed a file transfer protocol server
    for "one of the major sports leagues in north America," but did not name
    the league.

    It adds that he accessed a second network described as "a commercial
    broadcast television and radio network," also headquartered in New York
    City.

    Burke was charged with 14 crimes including one count of conspiracy, six
    counts of accessing a protected computer without authorization and seven
    counts of intentional interception of a wire, oral, or electronic communication.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/journalist-timothy-burke-indicted- federal-conspiracy-charge-rcna140061

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