A judge was forced to suspend a court hearing for the 17-year-old teenager Graham Clark, who is accused of being the "mastermind" behind the last massive hack on Twitter after a hack on the Zoom app.

Several people attended the virtual session disguised as reporters from "CNN" and "BBC" (BBC), and played loud music and pornographic videos, and confirmed several of the reporters who attended the session via Zoom yesterday, Wednesday, the incident.

Judge Christopher Nash briefly closed the hearing when he was boycotted by several people with pornographic, obscene, and loud music.

"I take the people out as quickly as possible whenever something goes wrong," Nash said after a hacker interrupted a lawyer. Then a video containing a pornographic clip was released, which prompted the judge to promptly stop the session, and the judge confirmed that he would ask for a password the next time.

The judge's fault

According to independent security journalist Brian Krebs, the problem was that the judge and his writers did not hold the meeting in a way that would ascertain the identity of the attendees and prevent them from taking over the screen (features that can be easily tuned when one creates a meeting by applying Zoom).

"Judges who hold ZOM hearings need to have a clue to learn how to use it," Krebs wrote on Twitter.

Chris considers that the court apparently failed to take the basic steps to prevent storming the hearing, and says that there is evidence to secure zoom meetings that must be followed in these sensitive meetings, and that the meetings are password-protected, and lock meetings as soon as they start to prevent unauthorized people from joining Later.

There is evidence to secure zoom meetings that must be followed in sensitive meetings (Reuters)

Refusal to lower bail

Clark faces 30 criminal charges related to the July 15 attack on Twitter, in which celebrity accounts like Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and Joe Biden were hacked and used in cryptocurrency fraud, and the hackers also accessed direct messages from 36 prominent account holders .

The 13th Circuit Court in Tampa, Florida, held a hearing on bail for Graham Clark, who previously pleaded not guilty, and is said to be held on bail of $ 72,500.

Ultimately, the judge was able to pass a ruling refusing to reduce the amount of the bond, yet he removed a requirement that Clark prove the legality of the assets, as lawyers said he had $ 3 million in Bitcoin under his control.

A spokesman for the Florida 13th Circuit Court refused to comment on MotherBoard, and said the court was unable to share the video of the hearing.