Well it's been five months and the criminal is unsurprisingly still at large. Check out the "9. TERM AND TERMINATION" section of WhoisGuard's
terms of service, and the "12. NECESSARY DISCLOSURE" section of WhoisGuard's
privacy policy. Seems like it would be fairly straight forward for a law enforcement agency to request this information, and maybe even civilians if BT broke their terms and conditions. Has anyone approached any authorities at all?
whois doesnt mean shit
you can fill in any fake information
the only reason scammers use whoisguard is to avoid being called out on the fake info early in the scam
they dont use whoisguard to protect their legitimate info dont be naive