Sigurður previously volunteered with secret-spilling site WikiLeaks before being accused of embezzling money from the organization by its founder, Julian Assange. During the Reykjanes trial, Assange testified by phone against Sigurður.
Following his falling out with WikiLeaks, Sigurður was exposed for turning over internal WikiLeaks documents to the FBI as a paid informant.
— ZED (@ZedTrafficker) August 28, 2015
In August 2011, Sigurður emailed the US embassy in Iceland promising "intel" on Assange and WikiLeaks; the following day he walked into the embassy and showed Assange's passport while further offering to snitch on WikiLeaks, and the Bureau accepted his offer, Iceland Magazine reported.
During the trial, it was revealed that Sigurður would offer the teenagers money — up to $200,000 — as well as vacations and expensive cars in return for sexual favors. When the teens denied him, he would engage in intense and aggressive sexual harassment through Facebook and email.
— Iceland Retweet (@IcelandRt) September 25, 2015
The court ruled that Sigurður is a sociopath with a severe anti-social personality disorder. They ruled that he did know right from wrong, however, and could not be considered insane and unfit to stand trial.
Earlier this year, Sigurður was also sentenced to 8 months in prison for violating another 17-year-old boy, and was given a separate 2-year suspended sentence for fraud in yet another case.