From hotel room hack to criminal retrial
Back in September 2022, Arion Kurtaj pulled off one of the most damaging leaks in gaming history from, of all places, a hotel room. Using an Amazon Fire Stick, a mobile phone, and a hotel TV, the then-teenager breached Rockstar Games and dumped roughly 90 clips of early Grand Theft Auto 6 footage onto the internet. The kicker? He did it while already on bail for a separate hack.
The fallout was severe. Rockstar later told courts the incident had cost the company $5 million to recover from and consumed thousands of hours of staff time across the studio. The breach remains one of the most high-profile gaming security incidents ever recorded.
Why Kurtaj never faced a conventional trial the first time
Kurtaj, a member of hacking group Lapsus$, was deemed psychologically unfit to stand trial in July 2023. Rather than a standard criminal proceeding, a jury at the time was asked only to determine whether he had actually committed the acts, not whether he was criminally responsible for them. They found he had.
The sentencing that followed in December 2023 was unusual. A judge ruled that Kurtaj posed an ongoing danger to the public, citing a mental health assessment that stated he "continued to express the intent to return to cyber-crime as soon as possible" and was "highly motivated" to do so. The result was an indefinite hospital order, meaning he would remain in a secure facility unless medical professionals determined he was no longer a risk.
That assessment has apparently shifted. BBC News cyber correspondent Joe Tidy posted on Bluesky that Kurtaj is now "out of the secure hospital he was sent to and now in a normal prison awaiting retrial," with a conventional criminal trial scheduled for November.
What changes with a criminal trial
This is a meaningful legal development. A full criminal trial means Kurtaj will now face the standard process that was bypassed in 2023, with a proper verdict and sentencing structure that could look very different from an indefinite hospital order.
The timing is notable too. GTA 6 is now a real, tangible product with pre-orders open and a launch window on the horizon. The game that Kurtaj leaked in raw, unfinished form years ago is about to reach players. If you want to get ahead on what's confirmed so far, the GTA 6 pre-order guide has everything you need on platforms, editions, and how to lock in a copy.
Rockstar, for its part, said at the time of the original breach that it did not expect "any long-term effect on the development" of the game. That statement aged reasonably well. The studio kept building, GTA 6 is coming, and the legal saga surrounding the person who exposed it mid-development is now entering a new chapter.
Kurtaj's November trial will be one to watch, both for the legal precedent it sets around cybercrime sentencing and for what it means for a case that has been anything but straightforward from the start. For everything confirmed about the game at the center of it all, the full GTA 6 guides collection has you covered as launch approaches.








