CHICAGO — An information technology specialist has been
sentenced to three years in federal prison for hacking into the servers of a
north suburban company where he formerly worked as a contractor.
EDWARD SOYBEL, 35, of Chicago, illegally accessed the servers
of Lake Forest-based W.W. Grainger Inc., on multiple occasions in late
2016. Soybel intentionally caused damage
to Grainger’s automated inventory management program, which operates on-site
dispensing machines for customers throughout the United States. The dispensing machines provide secure access
to durable products, such as safety equipment.
Soybel had worked as a technical support contractor at Grainger’s
facility in Niles until he was terminated in early 2016.
A federal jury last year convicted Soybel on all 12 counts
against him, including ten counts of intentionally causing damage to protected
computers, one count of attempting to cause damage to protected computers, and
one count of attempting to access a protected computer without authorization.
Soybel has been in custody since December 2018, after he
recorded a video of himself issuing threats of violence to law
enforcement. Before imposing the
sentence Wednesday in federal court, U.S. District Judge Matthew F. Kennelly
stated that he considered Soybel’s threats to be a significant aggravating
factor, and he increased the sentence due to the gravity of the threats.
The sentence was announced by John R. Lausch, Jr., United
States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; and Jeffrey S. Sallet,
Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. The Chicago Police
Department provided valuable assistance.
“Defendant’s crimes were not an isolated lapse of judgement
or one-off outburst,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Eichenseer argued in
the government’s sentencing memorandum.
“He essentially declared cyber war on Grainger, not out of principle or
for financial gain, but out of spite.”
Evidence at trial revealed that Soybel repeatedly gained
unauthorized access to a secure computer network of Grainger, a multi-national
industrial supply company. The network
was an inventory-management system that operated a nationwide grid of
dispensing machines to securely provide tools and safety equipment at customer
sites. Soybel remotely broke into the
computer system by stealing and then using his former co-workers’ usernames and
passwords. Once inside the network,
Soybel deleted millions of database records and reset the passwords.
The deletions caused outages of the system, locked out
users, and temporarily impaired the dispensing machines. Soybel’s attacks began in July 2016 and
continued for several months. Grainger
incurred at least $300,000 in costs responding to the cyber-attacks.
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