Mortgage Giant Fannie Mae's Virus Plot

Thirty-five year old Rajendrasinh B. Makwana, a citizen of India, was reported to have invented a virus code that could maliciously destroy data nationwide on all 4000 computer servers under mortgage giant, Fannie Mae. 

If this were to happen it'd cost millions of dollars to fix, while causing the company to shut down for at least two weeks. Allegedly, Fannie Mae stated that Indian born Makwana was, "an old contractor of the company that tried to damage the company's computer system previously," but why? 

Representatives of Fannie Mae failed to mention, why is it that they thought this man would do such a thing? Are they implying Makwana designed a virus because he was fired in October, because according to Fannie Mae officials Makwana tried to carry out this act way before he was released from his position. And again the singular word question is why, what did Makwana have to gain for carrying out this deed previously as opposed to right now?

The former Fannie Mae employee, pleaded not guilty to the charges and something tells there's more to this story than what Fannie Mae officials are letting on. Moreover, corruption plots involving private banking investors have been popping up left and right lately, so eliminating paper trail makes perfect sense to those carrying out the scams -- that could give way to a possible court hearing in the future.

If it is learned that Mr. Makwana was paid off to do this virus code scam, then the knew question will be who paid him off? 

2009 LA

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