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- UPI Domestic News Wire
- Wednesday July 17, 1985
- Update: 2
-
- More may be charged in ``hacker'' ring, prosecutor says
- NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (UPI) _ More people may be charged with using
- home computers to make free long-distance calls and reportedly try to
- break into Pentagon computers, a prosecutor said Wednesday.
- Meanwhile, the executive director of the state chapter of the
- American Civil Liberties Union charged the Middlesex County Prosecutor's
- Office with ``trampling'' on the rights of one of the seven youths
- charged in the scheme Tuesday.
- The youths used their computers and electronic ``bulletin boards''
- to exchange information on computer codes, including some that would
- cause communications satellites to ``change position'' and possibly
- interrupt intercontinental communications, Middlesex County Prosecutor
- Alan Rockoff said.
- ``Though it may sound like a copycat of (the movie) `WarGames,'
- things like this are happening in our society,'' Rockoff said, accusing
- the youths of obtaining thousands and ``possibly millions'' of dollars
- in telephone and informational services.
- A spokesman for American Telephone & Telegraph Co. said there was
- no indication that any of its satellites had been moved, or that even an
- attempt to move them was made.
- Assistant Prosecutor Frank Graves said investigators still had
- ``six more computers and 9 million floppy discs'' to look through.
- ``We had 300 names in one computer and we charged seven,'' Graves
- said. ``We have no idea what's in the other computers and won't know for
- a while.''
- The youths, whose names were withheld because of their ages, are
- charged with juvenile delinquency by reason of conspiracy to commit
- theft.
- South Plainfield police detective George Green said four of the
- defendants operated electronic bulletin boards, which are used for the
- exchange of legitimate information by hundreds of people.
- The youths also had a special code that provided illegal access to
- restricted information, Green said, and only those who used these parts
- of the bulletin boards were arrested.
- Rockoff said the investigation began in April when postal officials
- informed the South Plainfield police that someone using a post office
- box under a fictitious name apparently had been using a computer to gain
- illegal access to the computer of a Connecticut credit company.
- Rockoff turned over the results of the investigation to the Secret
- Service since the bulletin boards contained telephone numbers in a
- military defense communications system in the Defense Department, The
- New York Times reported Wednedsay.
- Plainfield patrolman Michael Grennier, a computer expert, said the
- youths also were able to break into an American Telephone & Telegraph
- computer after obtaining a manual from a AT&T trash bin.
- The investigation led to a South Plainfield youth, whose computer
- was seized in June. After Grennier and Green spent about 100 hours
- looking through his computer, the other six were arrested Friday _ in
- Hillsdale, Westwood, Warren Township, Martinsville, Dover and Edison.
- But Jeffrey Fogel of the ACLU office in Newark said the Dover
- youth,:!=5he declined to identify, was unfairly singled out.
- ``He has an electronic bulletin board and arresting him and seizing
- his computer amounts to seizing a printing press,'' Fogel said. ``It
- would be like if someone put a stolen credit card number in a newspaper
- classified. Would you close down the newspaper?''
-
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