Indian-origin expert charged with cyberstalking in US Federal court

NEW YORK: An Indian descent cybersecurity expert has been charged in a United State federal court with cyberstalking 5 people, including a deputy prosecutor and a police officer investigating him, and sending them threatening messages, according to Acting Attorney for the Western District of Washington Tessa Gorman.

A grand jury, which is a citizens' panel that decides if there is a prima facie case, indicted Sumit Garg on the cyberstalking charges on Wednesday, she said. He was detained in a federal detention centre on Monday and will be produced before a judge on March 25.

According to court documents, he also sent threatening emails to local judges with an implied threat of assassination in a list of judges and prosecutors killed. He used email and social media platforms, including some under fake identities, to cause "reasonable fear of death and bodily harm" and "substantial emotional distress" to various people over a year, the documents revealed.

Garg's problems started with a woman who shared a room in the house he lived in with his wife. He had allegedly looked at her diary and noted information about her health and previous relationship and later used them to intimidate and threaten her, according to the complaint.

Following an outburst by Garg, she moved out of the house and later he signed an agreement to not have contact with her but was later charged in a local court with cyberstalking the woman, her boyfriend and her uncle who is her lawyer, the complaint said.

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