Aaron Swartz's Lawyer: Prosecutor Stephen Heymann Wanted 'Juicy' Case For Publicity...

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Aaron Swartz's Lawyer: Prosecutor Stephen Heymann Wanted 'Juicy' Case For Publicity WASHINGTON -- The federal prosecutor who reportedly insisted on jail time for the late Aaron Swartz was "very, very difficult to deal with," Swartz's lawyer told The Huffington Post. In a phone interview Monday, Swartz's attorney Elliot Peters accused Massachusetts assistant U.S. attorney Stephen Heymann of pursuing federal charges against Swartz to gain publicity. Heymann was looking for "some juicy looking computer crime cases and Aaron's case, sadly for Aaron, fit the bill," Peters said. Heymann, Peters believes, thought the Swartz case "was going to receive press and he was going to be a tough guy and read his name in the newspaper." Heymann, the deputy chief of the criminal division in the Boston-based U.S. Attorney's office, also headed the computer crimes task force there, a position Peters said "doesn't carry much prestige and respect unless you have computer crimes cases."

Swartz, an open-democracy advocate, was found dead in an apparent suicide on Friday at the age of 26. He had been facing years in prison for downloading millions of articles from the online database JSTOR using the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's library. JSTOR declined to pursue civil charges against Swartz and urged federal prosecutors to abandon the case. MIT did not, and is currently reviewing its role in the case. Peters said Heymann was threatening Swartz with potentially longer prison sentences if Swartz didn't accept his plea deal offers. "He was very intransigent," Peters said of Heymann. "It was his philosophy that as you got closer to trial the plea offers only got worse. But the offer he was making was so unreasonable that having it get worse didn't concern me much." Heymann did not respond to HuffPost's requests for comment. Reached by reporters at his home over the weekend, Heymann referred calls to the U.S. Attorney's Office. Spokeswoman Christina Sterling, who issued a statement over the weekend saying the office wished to respect the Swartz family's privacy, declined further comment. Internet activists began posting Heymann's personal information online -- including his home phone number and links to his now-deactivated Facebook account -- after news reports highlighted his involvement in the Swartz case. Heymann is the son of Phillip Heymann, the former head of the Justice Department's Criminal


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