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US Army Soldier’s Phone Hack: From Call Logs to Comedy of Errors
US Army soldier Cameron John Wagenius, aka Kiberphant0m, has admitted to leaking private call records from AT&T and Verizon, targeting even Trump and Harris. In a plot twist worthy of a spy thriller, he faces up to 20 years in prison. Stay tuned as the drama unfolds, minus any actual snowflakes.

Hot Take:
When your day job is national defense, but your night gig is hacking phone records, you might want to reconsider your life choices. Cameron John Wagenius, a US Army soldier moonlighting as a cybercriminal with the flair of a Netflix drama, just pled guilty to leaking private call records. Who knew defending the nation could be so… multifaceted? AT&T and Verizon might want to consider adding ‘security breach’ to their list of services.
Key Points:
- US Army soldier Cameron John Wagenius pleads guilty to leaking private call records.
- Wagenius allegedly connected to data theft from over 150 Snowflake cloud accounts.
- Wagenius used the alias Kiberphant0m to boast about hacking telecom giants.
- Co-conspirators Alexander “Connor” Moucka and John Binns arrested in Canada and Turkey.
- Wagenius faces up to 20 years in prison and $500,000 in fines.