
According to a government court filing, Moore deliberately accessed the Supreme Court’s electronic filing system without authorization by using the stolen credentials of an authorized user (“GS”) on 25 separate days, at times returning to the site multiple times in a single day. Through that access, Moore obtained GS’s full name, email address, phone number, home address, date of birth, and the private answers GS had provided to three security questions.
The filing states that on July 29, August 18, and November 28, 2023, Moore posted screenshots of GS’s home page on the Supreme Court electronic filing system to his Instagram account, which used the handle “@ihackedthegovernment.” The screenshots, visible to the public, showed GS’s name and a list of all of GS’s current and past electronic filing records.
The government said Moore likewise used stolen credentials to access a My AmeriCorps account. He publicly posted that user’s name, date of birth, email address, home address, phone number, citizenship status, veteran status, service history, and the last four digits of the user’s Social Security number.
Moore posted Marine veteran’s personal info
Prosecutors say Moore also used stolen login credentials belonging to a U.S. Marine Corps veteran identified as “HW” to access the Department of Veterans Affairs’ My HealtheVet platform on five separate days. There he obtained HW’s personal information, including prescribed medications and blood type.
The government said that on October 13, 2023, Moore disclosed HW’s individually identifiable health information when he sent an associate a screenshot from HW’s MyHealtheVet account that identified HW and displayed the medications he had been prescribed. Moore then used his Instagram account to publicly post HW’s personal information, including his full name, home address, service branch, email address, phone number, and blood type.