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- ------------------------------
-
- From: Rambo Pacifist@placid.com.uunet.uu.net
- Subject: Hollywood Hacker Sentenced
- Date: Sun, 9 Jun 91 09:29:09 PDT
-
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- *** CuD #3.21: File 6 of 7: Hollywood Hacker Sentenced ***
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-
- "Writer Gets Probation in Sting at Fox." From THE LA TIMES,
- May 29, 1991, p. B-3 (Metro Section). By John Kendall.
-
- Free-lance writer Stuart Goldman pleaded no contest Tuesday to three
- felony charges of illegally entering Fox Televisions computer system
- and stealing story ideas planted by Los Angeles police in a sting
- operation.
-
- In a plea bargain presented by prosecutors and approved by Superior
- Court Judge Richard Neidorf, the 45-year-old self-proclaimed muckraker
- was placed on five years' probation and ordered to pay $90,000 in
- restitution, reduced to $12,000 with Fox's approval.
-
- The judge ordered Goldman to serve 120 days in County Jail but stayed
- the sentence.
-
- Deputy Dist. Atty. Richard Lowenstein moved for dismissal of four
- additional counts of entry of a computer illegally. Goldman's
- no-contest pleas were tantamount to admitting guilt, the prosecutor
- said.
-
- Despite the pleas, Goldman continued to insist outside the courtroom
- Tuesday that Hollywood-based Fox had attempted to silence him.
-
- "There's been an effort by Fox Television to silence me and, as far as
- I'm concerned, that's what this case was all about," Goldman told
- reporters.
-
- Attorney James E. Hornstein, representing Fox Television, denied
- Goldman's charge. He said his client had agreed to reduce the
- court-ordered restitution from $90,000 to $12,000 on Goldman's "plea
- and statement that he is indigent."
-
- "Throughout these proceedings, Mr. Goldman has tried to argue that
- someone was out to get him," Hornstein said. "The only victims in
- these proceedings were the computers of "A Current Affair which Mr.
- Goldman has admitted by the plea he accessed illegally."
-
- Goldman was arrested at his Studio City apartment in March of last
- year by Secret Service agents and Los Angeles police who confiscated a
- personal computer, floppy disks, Rolodexes and a loaded .38 caliber
- handgun.
-
- Prosecutors accused Goldman of using a password apparently gained when
- the journalist worked briefly for "A Current Affair" to enter the Fox
- production's computer system. They charged that Goldman stole bogus
- tips, including one involving "Ronald Reagan Jr.'s Lover," and
- attempted to sell the items to a national tabloid magazine.
-
- In an interview with The Times last year Goldman explained that he was
- engaged in a free-lance undercover inquiry of gossip news-papers and
- TV shows, and he claimed that his arrest was a setup to get him.
-
- "These people will look very foolish when they get into court,"
- Goldman insisted at the time. "I'm a good guy, and I'm going to prove
- it. This is going to be the biggest soap opera you ever saw."
-
- After his arrest, Goldman said he was writing a book about his
- experience as a former gossip media insider who once attacked
- feminists, gays and other targets in vitriolic columns in the National
- Review.
-
- After Tuesday's court session, Goldman vowed to publish his completed
- book, "Snitch," as soon as possible.
-
- Neidorf ordered authorities to return Goldman's computer.
-
- "I'm sure you know now that computers will get you in trouble," the
- judge said. "If you don't, I'll see you back in her again."
-
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