
UNIV. Michigan football
Former US coach Matt Wessi
accused of hacking athletes
Published
Matt Wiss — Former assistant coach for the University football team of Michigan — Now he faces several criminal charges … on charges of degrading intelligent images of hundreds of internet accounts of athletes after hacking illegally.
The Federal Prosecutor’s Office has accused the charges against the charges against Thursday in Michigan. They said Wise had access to more than 3,300 accounts — most of them belonged to women athletes in college — to obtain “prohibitions and videos that had never been going to be shared outside the intestinal partners.
The Central Bank of the United States wrote in a court recording that Wisis began committing crimes around 2015 — when he helped in John Harbag‘s Baltimore Ravens Staff — and continue all the road until Jim Harbag.
Prosecutors accuse Wisian of conducting a relatively detailed plan to enter the athletes’ accounts, claiming the 42-year-old girl is using the base and information that “being leaked from data violations” to obtain access.
They said he had “interpretives on those who saw the photos and videos he had watched, including notes that paid attention to their bodies and sexual desires.
Weiss is now accused of 10 identities and 14 charges of access to computers without permission.
“Our office is aggressively to prosecute computer hacking to protect our citizens’ accounts,” US lawyer Detroit said. Julie Becktold The Associated Press Agency Thursday.
Weiss played football in 2001-2003 at Vanderbeelt. In addition to his stopping in Baltimore and Michigan, he worked in Stanford.
Weiss was finally excluded from the Wolverins concert in January 2023 after police searched Anne Arbor at home. During police investigations, he said he would cooperate with the authorities and hoped for everything.