From Criminal Law Notebook
This page was last substantively updated or reviewed January 2015. (Rev. # 78399)
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Unauthorized Use of Computer |
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Case Digests
Case Name |
Prv. |
Crt. |
Sentence |
Summary
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R v Cisar, 2014 ONCA 151 (CanLII), per Rosenberg JA |
ON |
CA |
30 months imprisonment |
The offender was convicted of fraudulently obtaining computer services, fraudulent use of a computer system, theft and possession of stolen goods. He quit from a software company, taking a number of discs containing the source code for computer software the company was developing. He moved out of country, started a new software company and sold a software program created with the source code he took. The software was valued at $12 million.
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R v Charania, 2014 ONSC 1695 (CanLII), per Goodman J |
ON |
SC |
Discharge with 9 months probation |
see Mischief (Sentencing Cases) for details
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R v Mackie, 2013 ABPC 116 (CanLII), per Skene J |
AB |
PC |
1 year (unauthorized use x 5) 11 years (global) |
The offender was convicted of luring, extortion, child pornography, identity fraud, invitation to sexual touching. See Child Luring (Sentencing Cases)
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R v Grecu, 2004 ABPC 61 (CanLII), per Semenuk J |
AB |
PC |
12 months CSO |
The offender pleaded guilty to 5 offences involving the unauthorized computer equipment, cameras and other devices. He and an accomplice used the devices to forge credit cards which were in turn used to withdraw money. The offence was "sophisticated and involved a number of co-accused in what can only be described as organized criminal activity at the highest level". The total loss was $38,147.99, while the risk of loss was $648,820.00.
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