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- Date: Fri, 23 Apr 1993 13:25:21 -0700
- From: Peter shipley <shipley@merde.dis.org>
- Subject: File 6--Hacker Accused of Rigging Radio Contests
-
- (Reprinted from RISKS DIGEST, #14.55)
-
- Hacker Accused of Rigging Radio Contests
- By Don Clark Chronicle staff writer
- San Francisco Chronicle 22 Apr 1993
-
- A notorious hacker was charged yesterday with using computers to
- rig promotional contest at three Los Angeles radio stations, in a
- scheme that allegedly netted two Porsches, $20,000 in cash and at
- least two trips to Hawaii.
-
- Kevin Lee Poulsen, now awaiting trial on earlier federal charges, is
- accused of conspiring with two other hackers to seize control of
- incoming phone lines at the radio stations. By making sure that only
- their calls got through, the conspirators were assured of winning the
- contests, federal prosecutors said. A new 19-count federal indictment
- filed in Los Angeles charges that Poulsen also set up his own wire
- taps and hacked into computers owned by California Department of Motor
- Vehicles and Pacific Bell. Through the latter, he obtained
- information about the undercover businesses and wiretaps run by the
- FBI, the indictment states.
-
- Poulsen, 27, is accused of committing the crimes during 17 months on
- the lam from earlier charges of telecommunications and computers fraud
- filed in San Jose. He was arrested in April 1991 and is now in the
- federal Correctional Institution in Dublin. In December, prosecutors
- added an espionage charge against him for his alleged theft of a
- classified military document. The indictment announced yesterday adds
- additional charges of computer and mail fraud, money laundering,
- interception of wire communications and obstruction of justice.
-
- Ronald Mark Austin and Justin Tanner Peterson have pleaded guilty to
- conspiracy and violating computer crime laws and have agreed to help
- against Poulsen. Both are Los Angeles residents. Poulsen and Austin
- have made headlines together before. As teenagers in Los Angeles, the
- two computer prodigies allegedly broke into a Pentagon-organized
- computer network that links researchers and defense contractors around
- the country. Between 1985 and 1988, after taking a job at Menlo
- Park-based SRI International, Poulsen allegedly burglarized or used
- phony identification to sneak into several Pacific Bell offices to
- steal equipment and confidential access codes that helped him change
- records and monitor calls. After being indicted on these charges in
- 1989, Poulsen skipped bail and fled to Los Angeles where he was
- eventually arrested at a suburban grocery store. One of the
- unanswered mysteries about the case is how he supported himself as a
- fugitive. The new indictment suggests that radio stations KIIS-FM,
- KRTH-FM and KPWR-FM unwittingly helped out.
-
- Poulsen and his conspirators are accused of hacking into Pacific Bell
- computers to block out other callers seeking to respond to contests at
- the stations. The conspirators allegedly used the scheme to let
- Poulsen and Austin win Porsches from KIIS and let a confederate win
- $20,000 from KPWR. Poulsen created aliases and phony identification
- to retrieve and sell one of his Porsches and launder the proceeds of
- the sale, the indictment states. In February 1989, they arranged for
- Poulsen's sister to win a trip to Hawaii and $1,000 from KRTH, the
- indictment states.
- [Included in RISKS with permission of the author]
-
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