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Teenager found guilty of bomb hoax threats to Delta and American

Thursday, 7 July 20163 min read
Teenager found guilty of bomb hoax threats to Delta and American

A British teenager faces a jail sentence after being found guilty of sending bomb hoax threats to two US airlines via Twitter.

The 16-year-old boy, from Plymouth, Devon, England, who cannot be named, sent messages to Delta Air Lines and American Airlines and previously admitted cyber attacks on SeaWorld in Florida and on his local police force.

According to a BBC report, American Airlines received a Tweet on February 13 2015 which read: "One of those lovely Boeing airplanes has a tick, tick, ticking in it. Hurry gentlemen, the clock is ticking."

Delta Airlines received a similar Twitter message on the same day.

Neither airline, nor US authorities, decided not to take any action on the back of the threat and the matter was deferred to UK authorities.

The judge at a hearing this week at a youth court in Plymouth said the teenager had made ‘both detailed and sophisticated’ plans and said he faced a custodial sentence despite his age.

The boy pleaded guilty to three offences relating to denial of service attacks under Section 3 of the Computer Misuse Act

He was also found guilty of two offences under the Criminal Law Act relating to the communication of bomb threats.

The case has been adjourned until July 20 for sentencing.