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Guccifer, hacker who says he breached Clinton server, pleads guilty

Romanian Marcel Lehel Lazar, who claims he broke into Hillary Clinton's private e-mail server, appeared in U.S. court Friday.

A Romanian man who claims he broke into Hillary Clinton's private e-mail server -- and did manage to hack into computer accounts of prominent world figures — pleaded guilty Wednesday in a U.S. courtroom.

Marcel Lehel Lazar, entered guilty pleas to charges of identity theft and unauthorized access to protected computers before a federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia.

Lazar said "guilty" twice, standing before the judge in a green jail jumpsuit. He will be held until he is sentenced in September and could face up to seven years in prison.

Prosecutors said he broke into the e-mail and social media accounts of roughly 100 Americans, including a former US cabinet member and members of the family of former presidents George W. and George H.W. Bush.

RELATED: Plea change for Guccifer, hacker who says he breached Clinton server

After serving time in a Romanian prison, Lazar was brought to the US in late March to face federal charges in Northern Virginia, where Internet service provider AOL is located. Prosecutors say AOL e-mail accounts were among those he targeted.

A 44-year-old former taxi driver, he called himself Guccifer, pronounced GOO-chi-fer, which he said combined "the style of Gucci and the light of Lucifer."

He was accused of breaking into e-mail and Facebook accounts of former Secretary of State Colin Powell and other prominent figures. Prosecutors say his intrusion into computer accounts belonging to members of former president George W. Bush's family produced self-portraits by Bush that Lazar sent to news organizations.

He also obtained e-mails from Sidney Blumenthal, a former adviser to Hillary Clinton. Their disclosure online revealed that she had a private e-mail address, when eventually led the FBI to investigate whether classified information was mishandled.

Lazar claimed he succeeded in hacking into her private e-mail server and downloading some of the contents. "It was like an open orchid on the Internet. There were hundreds of folders," he told NBC News correspondent Cynthia McFadden before he was extradited to the US.

But Lazar refused to show any of the material he said he found on the Clinton server, and federal investigators said they have found no evidence to back up his claim.

Federal District Court Judge James Cacheris set a sentencing date of September 1, providing more time for preparing a pre-sentence report on Lazar's background in Romania.

This article first appeared on NBCNews.com