Monday 16 March 2009, 4:20 PM
Terry Waite speaks for Nasa hacker
Waite, who was held hostage in Lebanon for four years after being kidnapped in 1987, said that McKinnon's motives were "harmless", according to an article by Jack Doyle, a Press Association legal affairs correspondent.
"Gary is clearly a very clever chap," said Waite. "He has that unique ability to find his way through the internet jungle and enter the inner recesses of the Pentagon. Full marks for his ingenuity. Was Gary a spy? Was he attempting to bring down the mighty military force of the USA? As far as I know he was not. He was simply looking for little green men. Anyone who has the slightest acquaintance with that problem (Asperger’s Syndrome) will know that while the sufferer can be, and indeed often is, brilliant in certain logical processes they can become irrationally obsessive in other directions. The Pentagon ought to thank him for exposing the vulnerability of their systems. More importantly, the accused is suffering from Asperger's Syndrome and no nation under the sun ought to convict an individual whose behaviour is occasioned by illness."
The Daily Record is running the unchanged Press Association article here, while the BBC is running its version of the article, with the same quotes, paragraphs in a different order, plus some slightly different body text here.
Waite joins a growing number of celebrities, parliamentarians, and legal experts who have said that McKinnon should at least be tried in the UK, if at all. A whole range of people now support McKinnon, from Sting on one side of the equation to Lord Carlile on the other.
McKinnon has Asperger's Syndrome, a condition on the autistic spectrum, and faces up to seventy years in jail if extradited to the US and convicted under US anti-terrorism laws.
Comments on this post
Thanks for highlighting this story in the appropriate way Tom,
I think it's fair to say that most of us in the UK fundamentally disagree with Gary having to be tried outside of the UK if at all. Terry Waite's backing is surely an affirmation of this fact.
Waite's book 'Taken on Trust' recalling his time in Lebanon is testimony to the man's considered and thoughtful approach to life. I'm sure he applied the same carefully weighted approach to his thought process before he went on the record on this occasion.
Gary's condition as you rightly point out probably leads him to be an extremely inquisitive person. If he managed to expose a security flaw in this way then we should all be thankful that it was him and not the real little green men - or any other menace for that matter.
AdrianB


