Wild thing alleged Western Sydney Uni hacker has to do before release on bail
An alleged hacker accused of ransoming gigabytes of data stolen from Western Sydney University is set to be released on bail but not before her housemate hands over her smart TV.
Kingswood woman and firmware engineer Birdie Kingston, 27, appeared via videolink in Parramatta Local Court on Friday, two days after being arrested on a string of serious charges relating to an alleged data breach at the institution.
Police opposed her release on bail citing the risk that she could gain access to cloud servers and delete evidence before investigating officers could access them, the court was told on Friday.
The former WSU student was arrested over a series of alleged cyber attacks spanning four years with police arguing she was driven by a grievance against the institution.
Police have alleged that from 2021 her cyber attacks escalated dramatically, from securing discounted parking and changing her grades before she last year threatened to release data onto the internet.
The court heard on Friday she allegedly demanded $80,000 in exchange for the stolen data.
She threatened to sell personal information on the dark web and it has been estimated that hundreds of university staff and students were affected, it has been alleged.
It's not alleged that the data was ever posted to the internet and the university did not pay the ransom.
She was first spoken to by police in 2023 but was not arrested until this week when she was charged with 20 offences.
She is facing 10 counts of accessing/modifying restricted data, four counts of unauthorised modification of data, two counts of unauthorised function with intent serious offence, possess data with intent to commit computer offence, dishonestly obtaining property by deception, dishonestly obtaining financial advantage by deception, attempting to dishonestly obtain financial advantage by deception and demand with menaces.
Police seized mobile phones and computers from her Kingswood apartment and are combing through mountains of data that is located on cloud servers belonging to Ms Kingston.
Ms Kingston appeared in Parramatta Local Court on Friday morning, dressed in the same sweater she was wearing when she was arrested on Wednesday.
The police opposed her release on bail, citing the risk of her committing serious offences and tampering with evidence.
The court was told on Friday that police were in the process of trying to get access to cloud servers belonging to Ms Kingston.
And they were concerned that if she was on bail, that she could get in and delete evidence.
Police had accessed one server, but were yet to gain access to others.
The court was told that the servers had about 160GB of data on them.
In arguing for her release, her solicitor argued that custody would be more onerous given that she had several medical conditions - including ADHD, autism and a heart condition - and because she was transgender.
Acting Magistrate Judith Sweeney described Ms Kingston's alleged offending as 'sophisticated, ongoing' and 'impacting people's lives in a way that is unconscionable'.
She noted many people had been affected by hacking and identity theft, such as the 2022 Optus data breach.
Ms Kingston was released on bail on strict conditions including that she live with her flatmate at Kingston, abide by a curfew and report to police daily.
Ms Kingston is also banned from accessing the internet or owning an internet-capable phone.
And before she was released, the court ordered that her flatmate surrender her smart TV so there was no risk of Ms Kingston accessing the internet.
Ms Kingston will return to court on July 18.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Australian
2 hours ago
- The Australian
Angela Jones suspended after Eagle Farm treble which hurts her premiership hopes
Angela Jones' Eagle Farm treble saw her snatch the lead in the Brisbane jockeys' premiership, but her title hopes were dented by a suspension from the Group 1 Tatt's Tiara. Jones' tremendous trio of winners gave her a one-win lead over good friend and fellow jockey Emily Lang. But there was a sting in the tail late in the day with stewards grilling Jones over her ride on fifth-placed favourite Floozie in the Group 1. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Stewards also had winning jockey Tom Sherry in the room, in an inquiry into Jones shifting out on Floozie and Sherry shifting in on winner Tashi, going past the 200m mark. Runner-up Abounding and roughie Bubba's Bay were the meat in the sandwich in the incident. Jones pleaded not guilty, insisting to stewards that the shift from Sherry on Tashi had 'more than half'' the bearing on the interference. 'I don't think it's worthy of a charge,' Jones said. Stewards disagreed, charging Jones with careless riding and suspending her for 10 days to start after next Saturday's Winx Guineas meeting on the Sunshine Coast. Chief steward Josh Adams said the shift from Sherry had been taken into consideration when imposing Jones' penalty. The riding ban is the last thing Jones needed on the day she hit the lead in the Brisbane premiership race and she seems almost certain to appeal to the Queensland Racing Appeals Panel. Immediately after imposing Jones' suspension, stewards had Sherry back in the room. They found he was only 20 per cent culpable for the incident and issued the former Irishman with a severe reprimand. It somewhat soured a great day for Jones, who also surged past 100 winners for the Australian racing season.

News.com.au
5 hours ago
- News.com.au
Angela Jones suspended after Eagle Farm treble which hurts her premiership hopes
Angela Jones ' Eagle Farm treble saw her snatch the lead in the Brisbane jockeys' premiership, but her title hopes were dented by a suspension from the Group 1 Tatt's Tiara. Jones' tremendous trio of winners gave her a one-win lead over good friend and fellow jockey Emily Lang. But there was a sting in the tail late in the day with stewards grilling Jones over her ride on fifth-placed favourite Floozie in the Group 1. Stewards also had winning jockey Tom Sherry in the room, in an inquiry into Jones shifting out on Floozie and Sherry shifting in on winner Tashi, going past the 200m mark. Runner-up Abounding and roughie Bubba's Bay were the meat in the sandwich in the incident. Jones pleaded not guilty, insisting to stewards that the shift from Sherry on Tashi had 'more than half'' the bearing on the interference. 'I don't think it's worthy of a charge,' Jones said. Stewards disagreed, charging Jones with careless riding and suspending her for 10 days to start after next Saturday's Winx Guineas meeting on the Sunshine Coast. "It's Tashi's tiara!" ðŸ'' Tashi brings the blessings today and wins the Tatt's Tiara for @SnowdenRacing1, and doesn't @tomo_sherry love it, a Group 1 win! 🙌 @BrisRacingClub â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) June 28, 2025 Chief steward Josh Adams said the shift from Sherry had been taken into consideration when imposing Jones' penalty. The riding ban is the last thing Jones needed on the day she hit the lead in the Brisbane premiership race and she seems almost certain to appeal to the Queensland Racing Appeals Panel. Immediately after imposing Jones' suspension, stewards had Sherry back in the room. They found he was only 20 per cent culpable for the incident and issued the former Irishman with a severe reprimand. It somewhat soured a great day for Jones, who also surged past 100 winners for the Australian racing season.

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
Human remains located, police make arrest in search for Sunbury man Joshua Bishop
Police have found human remains and arrested a man as part of their investigation into missing Melbourne man Joshua Bishop. Public appeals for information about the disappearance of Mr Bishop, from Sunbury, were first made earlier this month. Missing Persons Squad detectives discovered the remains after executing a warrant at a home in Westmeadows on Saturday, but they are yet to be formally identified. A man aged 27 was taken into custody by police this afternoon and is expected to be interviewed in relation to the remains. Anyone with information that may assist police is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.