Thailand to extradite hacker wanted by the FBI

Hamza Bendelladj of Algeria (centre), a suspect on the US Federal Bureau of Investigation's top ten wanted list for allegedly hacking private accounts in 217 banks and financial companies worldwide, is escorted by Thai police officers during a press conference at the Immigration Police Bureau in Bangkok on January 7, 2013

An Algerian computer hacker wanted by the FBI for allegedly stealing millions of dollars from American banks to fund a lavish lifestyle has been arrested in Bangkok, Thai police said Monday. Hamza Bendelladj, 24, appeared unruffled by his looming extradition to the United States as he was paraded before the media in handcuffs with a beaming smile. "When asked what he did with the money, he said he spent it on travelling and a luxurious life like flying first class and staying in luxury places," Immigration Police chief Phanu Kerdlabphol told reporters. The FBI has been tracing the computer science graduate for three years after he began hacking into US banks at the age of 20, Phanu said. "He said he had hacked several US banks and once he hacked a bank with a transaction of 10 million dollars," he added. Bendelladj was detained at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi airport on Sunday after arriving from Malaysia for a connecting flight to Cairo.