Two days ago I posted an article about suspicions that Kiwi Farms, the despicable paedophilia, terrorism and hate site run by Joshua Conner Moon, has been hacked by law enforcement. Moon (who has legally changed his name to James Gabriel Potter), was forced to take the site down and notify users of the hack. Subsequently, at least one user complained of being invited to interview by British police. So, I asked the police force concerned. I expected if it is a hoax they would say so. On the other hand, if there is an investigation and they do have the data they would give a vague answer citing privacy and data protection laws. So, MHN received a response and it is door number 2.
The police response bears some parsing. I sent them a letter found on Twitter, with the West Yorkshire Police force logo purportedly inviting a Kiwifarms poster to a formal interview, but which had the suspect’s name blanked out. I asked the following questions –
“(1) Is there any form of investigation into posts on Kiwifarms ongoing, by or in conjunction with, West Yorkshire Police?
(2) What would police say in general to persons proposing to join and / or post on illegal websites?
(3) Is the letter genuine (copy attached)?
(4) Have UK law enforcement come into possession of the user and IP data from the recent hack of Kiwifarms?
(5) Did the National Crime Agency hack Kiwifarms?”
I received in response, “We are unable to comment on named individuals”. However, fairly obviously no individual is named in the letter I sent them. Also, none of my questions refer to a named individual. If the letter was forged, data protection and privacy laws would not be engaged. The police would have no reason not to just say it was a forgery. However, these officers in West Yorkshire are not acting like a police force that has been forged, nor a police force that is triumphantly announcing a win. This comes across as a force that is working with partner agencies on a list of offenders and is likely to be concerned about undermining an ongoing, wider investigation. It is similar to how police act when they have obtained the members list from a drugs market darknet site, for example.
What does it mean for Kiwifarmers? Well, it basically means they are in trouble. Joshua Conner Moon / James Gabriel Potter advises users to user TOR or a no-log VPN when accessing his site (whilst simultaneously insisting it is totally legal). The problem is, that is not enough when dealing with the FBI or worse, the British equivalent being the Continue reading