Adrian Lamo, the hacker who turned in Chelsea Manning, has died at 37

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Adrian Lamo, the hacker who turned in Chelsea Manning, has died at 37

Lamo Mitnick Poulsen

Wikimedia Commons

Adrian Lamo, left, with Kevin Mitnick, and Kevin Poulsen in 2001.

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  • Adrian Lamo, a hacker who informed the government about Chelsea Manning's theft of secret documents, has reportedly died.
  • Lamo, who had been previously convicted of illegally hacking into the New York Times' website, was 37.
  • His cause of death hasn't been disclosed.


Adrian Lamo, the hacker perhaps best known for reporting Chelsea Mannning's theft of secret documents to the government, has reportedly died.

His father, Mario Lamo, announced Lamo's death in a Facebook group on Friday.

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"With great sadness and a broken heart I have to let know [sic] all of Adrian's friends and acquaintances that he is dead," Mario Lamo wrote. "A bright mind and compassionate soul is gone, he was my beloved son."

Lamo's father did not disclose the cause of his death, which was first reported by ZDNet. He was 37.

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Lamo first drew public attention in the early 2000s when he hacked into several high-profile websites, including Yahoo and the New York Times. He pleaded guilty for the Times hack and was fined and sentenced to six months of home detention. He later drew scrutiny for his interactions with Manning.

Manning, who was serving in Army intelligence at the time, reached out to Lamo via a messaging app and disclosed to him that she had gained access to hundreds of thousands of classified documents and had leaked to Wikileaks a video of a US military forces in a helicopter machine indiscriminately gunning down journalists and Iraqi civilians.

Lamo subsequently informed government investigators of Manning's disclosures. The move drew harsh criticism from some quarters, because it led to Manning's arrest and conviction and it happened after he had reportedly promised Manning confidentiality.

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