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JumpCrisscrossyesterday at 9:27 PM2 repliesview on HN

> Muneeb and Sohaib Akhter, now both 34, had been in trouble before. Back in 2015, the brothers pled guilty in Virginia to a scheme involving wire fraud and computers. Muneeb was sentenced to three years in prison, while Sohaib got two.

After their stints in jail, the brothers worked their way back into the tech world. In 2023, Muneeb got a job with a Washington, DC, firm that sold software and services to 45 federal clients; Sohaib got a job at the same company a year later.

What in the actual fuck. I'm all for giving people second chances. But maybe some ringfencing?


Replies

notahackeryesterday at 11:02 PM

The fraud conviction seems totally inappropriate for a government contractor and yet... somehow totally appropriate for someone appointed to work directly for the upper echelons of federal government. Hell, everyone else hacking government officials emails and tax returns and randomly deleting stuff for the lolz in February 2025 was being paid by DOGE.

JuniperMesosyesterday at 10:45 PM

No, this is exactly what giving people second chances looks like. It means taking a risk that they're the sort of person who is likely to commit a crime and who will commit a crime again after being given the second chance. The only way to prevent this is to have a blanket policy against giving second chances to people convicted of crimes, which harms people who genuinely intend to reform and not commit crimes again, and who you cannot systematically distinguish from chronic criminals.

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