Judge, Dragon Con co-founder accused of criminal trespass


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ATLANTA (AP) — A grand jury has indicted a Georgia judge, along with a co-founder of DragonCon and two others, after prosecutors accused them of illegally accessing a courthouse computer network.

The indictment issued Wednesday charges Gwinnett County Superior Court Judge Kathryn Schrader, Ed Kramer, Frank Karic and T.J. Ward each with three counts of computer trespass. It says they illegally accessed the Gwinnett County Justice Center computer network in February.

Bonds of $25,000 were set for Karic and Ward, and Kramer was denied bond. Schrader was released without bond after being booked into jail Wednesday afternoon.

Lawyers for Schrader and Reba did not immediately respond to requests for comment. It was not immediately clear whether Ward and Karic had attorneys who could comment.

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