home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 29American NotesPRISONSCriminal Charges?
-
-
- There was something about the scheme that just did not
- compute. Under a recent contract between the federal Department
- of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. prison system, 45
- inmates at the Federal Correctional Institution in Lexington,
- Ky., were set to work entering data from thousands of
- applications for FHA insurance into a computer. But Beverly
- Hirsch, 36, who is serving a 40-year sentence for credit-card
- and check fraud, was surprised to see that some forms carried
- not only information on applicants' income and debts, but their
- bank-account and credit-card numbers as well. "The information
- they were giving me in here was what I worked pretty hard on the
- outside to get," says she. Concerned that some inmates might try
- to cash in on the information, Hirsch alerted reporters and the
- U.S. Attorney's office. That led Warden Patrick R. Kane to shut
- down the operation last month and call in the U.S. Secret
- Service to investigate whether any of the data improperly fell
- into the hands of prisoners. HUD, says Kane, was "supposed to
- send in information that was not sensitive. If I've got your
- credit-card number, that's damn sensitive." So far, no frauds
- have turned up.
-
-
-