Tor Bernhard Ekeland is a New York City based computer, trial and appellate lawyer. He is best known for representing hackers prosecuted under the
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act ("CFAA"), as well as white-collar defendants, in federal criminal court and on appeal across the United States.
Biography
He graduated cum laude from
Fordham University School of Law in 2006, where he served on the
Fordham Law Review. After law school, he practiced complex commercial and securities litigation at
Sidley Austin in New York City.[1] He is the Managing Partner of Tor Ekeland Law, PLLC.[2] H
Notable Representations
Represented
Andrew "weev" Auernheimer at trial and on Auernheimer's successful 2014 appeal to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, both as co-counsel; called "the Troll's lawyer" by
Washington Post[3][4]
Part of team representing journalist
Matthew Keys pro bono, who was charged with hacking when he gave
Anonymous credentials to the
Los Angeles Times website. Keys was found guilty.[5]
Representing Fidel Salinas pro bono. Salinas was indicted on 44 federal felony counts of computer crime for his work with Anonymous, including 18 cyberstalking charges. Ekeland negotiated a
plea deal for Salinas's original misdemeanor charge, unrelated to the Anonymous charges. An
Electronic Frontier Foundation representative called the felony counts a "vindictive indictment" since Salinas refused to cooperate.[7][8]
Representing Justin Shafer, who was indicted on 6 federal felony counts of computer crime, and negotiating a single misdemeanor plea deal;[9]
Representing the U.K. hacker Lauri Love as his U.S. counsel. The United States Department of Justice indicted Love for felony CFAA violations in New York City, New Jersey, and Virginia. Alongside the Courage Foundation, Ekeland contributed to the successful fight to prevent Love's extradition from the U.K.[10][11]
Representing Deric Lostutter, the hacker and member of Anonymous, in his plea agreement for his indictment for hacking the fan website for the football team implicated in the
Steubenville High School rape case;[12]
Representing the hacker Matt DeHart in his plea deal;[13]
Representing Keith Gartenlaub on his FISA search warrant appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal as co-counsel alongside John D. Cline.[14][15]
In February 2019, Ekeland became engaged to
Carrie Goldberg, an attorney specializing in
revenge porn and other sex crimes; they had worked together in a lawsuit against
Grindr.[16]
^Andy Greenberg (26 November 2014).
"Oops: After Threatening Hacker With 440 Years, Prosecutors Settle for a Misdemeanor". WIRED. Retrieved 8 April 2020. Not every hacker victim of prosecutorial overreach will win the attention of a pro bono lawyer, either. "I feel sorry for all the people that don't have the support that Fidel had," says Ekeland. "There are a ton of Fidel Salinases out there that aren't as lucky."