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- LAPD suffers mystery hack
- By Janet Kornblum
- May 29, 1997, 1:55 p.m. PT
-
- Call it the case of the unexplained hack.
-
- This morning, reporters throughout cyberspace
- were greeted by an email message claiming the Los
- Angeles Police Department's Web site got hacked
- last night.
-
- Although the Web site now shows a blank, gray
- screen, a copy of the alleged hack bears a political
- message accusing the LAPD of racism, calling it the
- "Death Squad Home Page."
-
- It appeared to be a standard hack, without the
- pornography or juvenile images used when vandals
- broke into pages at the Air Force, the Central
- Intelligence Agency, and the Justice Department.
-
- The only problem is that it apparently never
- happened. The whole story appears to be a hoax
- about a hoax, at least according to the Net service
- providers involved with the site.
-
- About a year ago, an LAPD police officer went to
- Internet Presence Providers for Net access. That
- got Peter Hertan, president of IPP, thinking. He
- checked and found out that "www.lapd.org" had
- never been registered with the InterNIC. So he
- went ahead and filed for it.
-
- Sure enough, nearly a year later, some LAPD
- officers determined to build an LAPD Web site
- asked to buy back the URL and Hertan sold it to
- them at cost.
-
- The officers then asked EarthLink if it would host
- the site. EarthLink said that it would when the
- police officers got the official go-ahead.
-
- But that go-ahead never came. The officers went up
- and down the chain of command and at every level,
- the answer came back the same: No.
-
- So from May of last year, when it was registered,
- until today, the LAPD site consisted of a gray
- screen with the words "lapd.org Initial Home Page."
-
- Hertan says that from the day he put it up to the day
- it was taken down, "nothing was added to the Web
- site. Nothing was taken away. We show no
- evidence of it being hacked."
-
- EarthLink never made the site live either, says Jon
- Irwin, vice president of customer support.
-
- Since the site never really existed, it couldn't have
- been hacked. That means either someone got the
- story wrong or concocted an hack that wasn't really
- a hack.
-
- In any case, the Webmaster at "lapd.com," the
- official officers' union page and the closest thing to
- an LAPD Internet site, says it has been untouched
- by hacker hands.
-
- For the LAPD, the whole episode is proof of
- nothing except that rumors can travel very quickly
- on the Net. "I've already hit the news, and I haven't
- even done anything with the site," said one officer
- who had tried to help create the site.