Andrew Garcia, 38, admitted to a Los Angeles district court that he caused more than US$53,000 in damages and clean-up costs when he had shut down a key server and prevented ViewSonic's Taiwan office from accessing the business's data, said Wesley Hsu, an assistant U.S. attorney for the Central District of California.
While ViewSonic had locked his accounts, Garcia had used another employee's account to gain access, Hsu said. "He had, in the course of his employment, obtained other employees passwords," he said. Garcia's attorney wasn't available for comment.
Garcia administered ViewSonic's network at the company's Walnut, California, main office. On April 14, 2002, two weeks after Garcia was terminated, he logged into the system using another employee's passwords and deleted critical files, causing the server to crash, according to the Justice Department. ViewSonic's Taiwan office was unable to access the server for several days, the Justice Department said in the statement.
Garcia is scheduled to be sentence in the case on January 12, 2004. He faces a maximum sentence of five years and a fine of US$250,000.












Silly bugger for getting caught I reckon.