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- THE HACKER WHO VANISHED
-
- Suicide or clever hoax?
-
- Early one morning last September, a pair of California computer whizzes
- were doing what hackers like to do best: peering at a glowing terminal,
- hacking away at a programs and talking about the books and movies they might
- someday write about their electronic exploits. Tom Anderson, 16, paused to
- take a shower. "When I came out," recalls Anderson, who had left his friend,
- Bill Landreth, busily pounding away at the keyboard, "he was gone. And I
- haven't seen him since."
-
- Landreth's disappearance from Escondido, a suburb of San diego, is of
- concern to more than his family and friends. Three years ago, Landreth--
- whose IQ measured 163 and who was only 19 at the time--was convicted of wire
- fraud after he tapped into a GTE electronic-mail service whose clients
- included NASA and the Defense Department. Landreth passed the access code
- along to other hackers; soon computer users around the country were using the
- GTE lines for free. But since Landreth (known to other hackers as "THE
- CRACKER" from the book INNER CIRCLE) hadn't altered any message or stolen any
- money, the judge let him off with three years' probation. Landreth later
- capitalized on his notoriety by writing a book about breaking through computer
- security screens and by advising businesses on how to protect their system
- against the type of intrusion that got him in trouble. But by disappearing,
- Landreth broke his probation terms and is now being sought by U.S. marshals.
-
- The hacker's friends doubt that he is on the lam. "It's not unusual for
- him to disappear," says Jenny Perkes, a former girlfriend. Indeed Anderson
- remembers that Landreth liked to cultivate an air of mystery and recently had
- taken off to Mexico and later Sweden without telling anyone, returning a week
- later as if he had just been to the corner store. But Landreth has never
- before been gone for such a long period; and this time he vanished without
- leaving money for rent--a discourtesy that friends say is totally out of
- character. "He was a gentleman, a very thoughtful person, very generous,"says
- Perkes.
-
- Landreth left something esle behind, however: a rambling eight-page letter
- that only added to the mystery. Landreth apparently wrote the letter, which
- was addressed to no one and left in his room, during a period last summer when
- friends say he appeared depressed. The rambling discourse touches on such
- topics as evolution, nuclear war, society's greed, computers becoming more
- important than man,the meaning of existence and, ulitmately, suicide. "The
- idea is that I will commit suicde sometime around my 22nd birthday <sic>,"
- the note said. "This will have given me 22 or so years with which to convince
- myself that life really isn't worth living." Landreth's 22nd birthday was
- Dec. 26. Anderson, for one expects never to hear from his friend again.
-
- Cryptic message: But Landreth's apparent suicide note had an escape
- clause. Some months after typing the suicide reference, he added the words:
- "Since writing the above, my plans have changed slightly. I am going to take
- this money I have left...and make a final attempt at making life worthy. It
- will be a short attempt, and I do suspect that if it works out that none of my
- friends will know me then. If it dosen't work out, the news of my death will
- probably get around (I won't try to hide it)."
-
- Does Landreth's note reflect a troubled youth contemplating suicide or an
- adventure-loving computer genius playing an elaborate real-life Dungeons &
- Dragons like game on his friends? So far, neither the police nor the federal
- marshals nor his friends have been able to crack the mystery of the hacker who
- one day disappeared leaving no trace than a computer deleted sentence.
-
- George Hackett with Hilliard Harper in San Diego
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