https://www.wired.com/2016/06/tor-developer-jacob-appelbaum-resigns-amid-sex-abuse-claims/

Andy Greenberg

Tor Developer Jacob Appelbaum Resigns Amid Sex Abuse Claims

Jacob Appelbaum has courted controversy throughout his career as a privacy and 
transparency activist, picking fights with several of the world’s most powerful 
government agencies over surveillance and state secrecy. Now he’s at the center 
of an entirely different sort of controversy: accused of rampant sexual and 
emotional abuse.

On Saturday, the privacy-focused non-profit Tor Project where Appelbaum held a 
position as a developer and activist released a statement explaining that 
Appelbaum had resigned from his position with the group as a result of a series 
of “serious, public allegations of sexual mistreatment” made by unnamed victims 
against 33-year-old Appelbaum. An anonymous website collecting testimonials 
from those alleged victims published the same day, with five victims detailing 
claims that range from uninvited groping and kissing to rape.

On Monday morning, Appelbaum responded to the accusations in a statement, 
calling them “a calculated and targeted attack [that] has been launched to 
spread vicious and spurious allegations against me.” He added, “I want to be 
clear: the accusations of criminal sexual misconduct against me are entirely 
false.” His publicist Claudia Tomassini responded to WIRED’s request for 
comment from Appelbaum to say that his “legal team is working on an injunction 
against these monstrous and factually incorrect accusations.”

WIRED couldn’t independently verify the stories on the website created by 
Appelbaum’s accusers, who used pseudonyms, nor determine the creator of the 
site itself. But Andrea Shepard, a Berlin-based developer co-worker of 
Appelbaum’s at the Tor Project, says the site was created by a “longtime member 
of the Tor community” whom she knows and trusts. Shepard also says she’s spoken 
directly with one of Appelbaum’s alleged victims, who told Shepard in February 
of this year that Appelbaum had raped him or her. “Sadly…I think it’s the damn 
truth. He’s a charismatic, socially dominant manipulator,” Shepard writes to 
WIRED. “I absolutely believe the accusers.”

Shepard says that Tor’s management had suspected Appelbaum of sexual misconduct 
for months. And the revelation of another alleged victim in recent weeks had 
accelerated calls to force his resignation from the organization, a push led by 
Tor’s executive Director Shari Steele. The Tor Project’s statement, written by 
Steele herself, echoed that timeline. “These types of allegations were not 
entirely new to everybody at Tor; they were consistent with rumors some of us 
had been hearing for some time. That said, the most recent allegations are much 
more serious and concrete than anything we had heard previously,” Steele 
writes. “We are deeply troubled by these accounts.”

Hacker Elite

For years, Appelbaum has held near-rockstar status within the hacker community. 
In 2010 he keynoted the HOPE hacker conference, outing himself as a 
collaborator with WikiLeaks—its only publicly known American staffer—just as it 
was ramping up its record-breaking Pentagon and State Department leaks. (A 
Rolling Stone magazine profile a couple of months later called him “the most 
dangerous man in cyberspace.”)

Likely as a result of his WikiLeaks work, Google and his internet service 
provider Sonic.net received court orders demanding Appelbaum’s communications 
as part of a grand jury investigation in 2011. Appelbaum wasn’t indicted, but 
has said that he was repeatedly harassed and detained at U.S. border crossings 
by agents of the Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border 
Protection. To avoid run-ins with the American government, he moved to Berlin. 
As a hacker exile he’s continued to work for Tor and also contributed to the 
analysis and publication of NSA leaker Edward Snowden’s classified documents, 
as well as other surveillance investigations in the German newspaper Der 
Spiegel.1

But Shepard, who also lives in Berlin, says she could see a pattern of 
troubling behavior that led her to distance herself from Appelbaum. In 2013, 
she recalls, Appelbaum told Shepard in a bar in front of another colleague that 
he was going to have sex with her, using a misogynistic phrase. In late 2014, 
she says he aggressively snatched a phone out of her hands at a hacker 
conference. And in the spring of last year she says he was suspended from his 
position at Tor for two weeks without pay due to a harassment incident.

A Familiar Pattern

The scandal’s implications could go well beyond the Tor Project, which 
maintains the highly-regarded Tor anonymity software. It also highlights the 
broader hacker community’s long-running problem with sexism and sexual 
harassment. The notion, as Tor’s executive director Steele wrote, that rumors 
about Appelbaum weren’t new but had been ignored, portrays a community that 
turns a blind eye to the inequality or even mistreatment of women. As 
University of Pennsylvania’s well-known computer security professor Matt Blaze 
wrote on Twitter, “our community (larger than Tor) failed badly here.”

Tor’s executive director Steele, meanwhile, urged in her note about Appelbaum 
that anyone who thinks they may be a victim of criminal behavior should talk to 
law enforcement. “Going forward, we want the Tor community to be a place where 
all participants can feel safe and supported in their work,” she added. “We are 
committed to doing better in the future.”

1Correction 6/6/2016 9:55am EST: An earlier version of the story said that 
Google and Sonic.net were subpoenaed for Appelbaum’s data in 2011, when in fact 
they received a 2703(d) court order.
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