Yahoo Web Search

  1. amazon.co.uk has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month

    Browse new releases, best-sellers & recommendations from our readers

Search results

  1. Dec 11, 2023 · Gary McKinnon got his first computer at age 14. It was the Atari 400, which proved to be a capable device for learning to write code in Basic. Inspired by the movie WarGames, where Matthew Broderick acted as a young hacker breaching into the Pentagon, McKinnon left school at 17, worked as a hairdresser, and later found sporadic work in tech support.

    • Senior Journalist
  2. You can browse all the recently released and upcoming books using the book release calendar below. If you'd like to receive emails when your favorite authors announce a new book, sign up for our favorite author alerts. We also have alerts for your favorite series.

  3. Gary McKinnon (born February 1966) is a Scottish systems administrator and hacker who was accused by a US prosecutor in 2002 of perpetrating the "biggest military computer hack of all time". [1] McKinnon said that he was looking for evidence of free energy suppression and a cover-up of UFO activity and other technologies potentially useful to the public.

  4. Saving Gary McKinnon is the true story of a mother's fight to save her son from living out the rest of his life behind bars, with a foreword by Julie Christie. The US judiciary had all the might of the world's greatest power. But it had not reckoned on Gary's mother. Read more. Report an issue with this product.

    • (52)
    • Janis Sharp
  5. The People V. Gary McKinnon: Directed by Paul McGuigan. This is the story of how a neuro-diverse man's innocent search for UFOs turned into a 'David and Goliath', decade-long fight for his life against the US Government.

  6. Jun 21, 2006 · McKinnon: It's down to the Home Secretary, John Reid. The deadline for representations is 21 June 2006. The deadline for representations is 21 June 2006. Even after that date, it could be as much ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Mar 23, 2009 · 50. In the High Court decision (McKinnon v.Government of the USA, [2007] EWHC 762, at p. 8), Lord Justice Kay discounted an argument made on the basis of the disparity in possible sentences between the United States and United Kingdom: ‘[I]f convicted, Mr McKinnon would be facing sentence for very serious offences and the fact that any sentence would be longer than an English court might ...

  1. People also search for