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- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk
- Path: sparky!uunet!ferkel.ucsb.edu!taco!gatech!swrinde!emory!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!eff!fig
- From: fig@eff.org (Cliff Figallo)
- Subject: Steve Jackson Games trial
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.171349.13875@eff.org>
- Summary: The first day
- Originator: fig@eff.org
- Sender: usenet@eff.org (NNTP News Poster)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: eff.org
- Organization: The Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 17:13:49 GMT
- Lines: 72
-
-
- A report from EFF staff counsel Shari Steele on the first day of the
- Steve Jackson Games trial in Austin, Texas.
- *******************************
-
- Hi everyone.
- The Steve Jackson Games case finally got underway a little after 1:00 pm
- today. There were settlement efforts up until the end, but it turned out
- the attorneys for the government could not get approval from DC for the
- terms necessary. Jim George and Pete Kennedy did a terrific job of
- representing our plaintiffs in the case. First they sequestered all
- witnesses so they couldn't hear each others' stories in attempts to make
- them match. Then they called Tim Foley (Secret Service) as the first
- witness. They asked him lots of questions about his knowledge at the time
- of the raid. He testified that he did not know whether Phrack, with the
- evil E-911 document, had been sent to SJG. He also said that he knew that
- e-mail was on the menu of the BBS, implying that there was e-mail on the
- system at the time of the seizure (although he denied actually knowing if
- there was e-mail on the system. He denied ever making the statement that
- GURPS Cyberpunk was a handbook for computer crime. He wouldn't give Steve
- copies of anything from the machine that ran the BBS because he was afraid
- it might have been "booby-trapped." He also didn't know Congress had
- passed any laws giving special protection during searches to publishers.
-
- They next called Larry Coutorie, police officer at the University of Texas.
- The original affidavit filed by Foley to support the search warrant stated
- that Coutorie provided the Secret Service with Blankenship's (SJG employee
- suspected of evil-doing) address and place of business. Coutorie insisted
- that he didn't remember doing that, and agreed with Pete Kennedy as he
- proved that he couldn't have known anything about Blankenship to pass on.
- It was a good moment!
-
- Barbara Golden, Secret Service in charge of search onsite (Foley was not
- onsite at the time of the search) was next called. She started out by
- admitting that she didn't know anything about computers -- that she had
- telco people conducting the search under her supervision. She also didn't
- know there was a special law for publishers regarding searches. She was
- the one who decided to take the entire BBS, but she didn't even check to
- see what the system contained. Once she completed the inventory of what
- was taken, she was no longer involved with the case.
-
- Steve Jackson was called next. He gave a demo of the BBS as it was
- returned to him by the Secret Service that the judge seemed to really
- enjoy. He testified that the Secret Service took 3 computers (1 was
- completely disassembled - they took the parts), 2 hard disks, and more than
- 300 floppies. Steve's testimony will continue tomorrow morning.
-
- All in all, I think the trial is going quite well. The judge has a very
- dry sense of humor and is very down-to-earth -- he's left his robe unzipped
- the whole trial. He's not a technoid, but he seems to be trying to
- understand. I'll report again tomorrow.
- Shari
-
-
-
-
-
- <<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>>
- Cliff Figallo fig@eff.org
- Online Communicator (617)864-0665 (voice)
- Electronic Frontier Foundation, Cambridge (617)864-0866 (fax)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- <<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>><<*>>
- Cliff Figallo fig@eff.org
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (617)864-0665 (voice)
- Online Communications (617)864-0866 (fax)
-