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- From : Ronald Mark Austin 1:340/13 29 Nov 95 01:33:00
- To : All 29 Nov 95 09:45:08
- Subj : Justin Petersen aka "Agent Rat" sentenced
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- From: austin@phish.nether.net (Ronald Mark Austin)
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- REPRINTED BY PERMISSION
-
- Los Angeles Times
- November 28, 1995, Tuesday, Valley Edition
- SECTION: Metro; Part B; Page 5
-
-
- HEADLINE: COMPUTER HACKER WHO JUMPED BAIL GETS 41 MONTHS;
- CRIME: JUSTIN PETERSEN RIGGED RADIO CONTESTS AND CRACKED BANK SECURITY.
- 'SPECIAL SKILLS' MAY HAVE HAD ROLE IN SENTENCING.
-
- BYLINE: By LESLIE BERGER, TIMES STAFF WRITER
-
- BODY:
- Convicted computer hacker Justin Tanner Petersen -- who used the handle
- "Agent Steal," took part in a scheme to rig lucrative radio station contests
- and admitted to illegally possessing 40 passwords to various financial
- accounts -- was ordered Monday to serve 41 months in federal prison, the
- second-stiffest sentence ever meted out for similar cyber-crimes.
- leaves prison; was ordered to use computers for employment only, and to pay
- more than $40,000 in restitution to his victims, whose credit-card numbers
- and other confidential information were stolen via computer.
-
- In sentencing Petersen in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, Judge
- Stephen V. Wilson called him "a bad apple" whose talent had been ill-used.
-
- Citing the old adage that "an accountant's pen can do more harm than a
- crowbar and a hammer," Wilson lamented that in an age when more and more
- confidential information is being stored in computers, "someone like Mr.
- Petersen can do even more harm than an accountant's pen."
-
- Petersen's lawyer, Jay L. Lichtman, said he planned to appeal the
- sentence, which he says was unfairly enhanced by two special circumstances
- invoked by federal prosecutors: first, that Petersen had used "special
- skills" in committing his crimes and second, that he fled while on bail, and
- while helping the federal government pursue cases against other hackers.
-
- "Obviously, they were not pleased he absconded," Lichtman said after the
- sentencing. Wilson: "I'd like to apologize to the people I victimized and to
- the government . . . and the FBI for the problems I created."
-
- Petersen fled in October, 1993, after cooperating with the federal
- government for two years following his 1991 arrest in Texas. He was
- re-arrested in Los Angeles in August, 1994, and has been in federal custody
- since then.
-
- Lichtman said Petersen went underground because federal agents were
- threatening to charge him with additional computer crimes, which Petersen
- claims he committed to raise the money to buy computer equipment to help him
- track down an unidentified fugitive hacker who was harassing him and his
- family because he was cooperating with the government.
-
- Petersen initially gained notoriety in the late 1980s, when he and
- convicted hacker Kevin Poulsen rigged the telephone lines to three Los
- Angeles radio stations, enabling them to win two Porsches, two trips to
- Hawaii and thousands of dollars in the station's contests.
-
- After his arrest in Texas, where he was charged with driving a stolen
- Porsche across state lines and several hacking crimes, Petersen agreed to
- testify against Poulsen and help federal agents in their pursuit of other
- hackers, Monday.
-
- But in the midst of his cooperation with the government, while Petersen
- supported himself by promoting performances at after-hours clubs in the San
- Fernando Valley and Hollywood, he disappeared.
-
- He has since admitted that before he became a fugitive, he conspired to
- transfer $150,000 from Heller Financial in Glendale to the Union Bank account
- of an unidentified third party in Bellflower. He also admitted that to cover
- up the crime and divert Heller employees' attention from the transfer, he
- phoned in two phony bomb threats to Heller to force its evacuation.
-
- Schindler declined to discuss the case further on Monday, saying only that
- no charges had been filed against the holder of the Union Bank account that
- received the money. A number of hackers are under investigation, he said.
-
- Whether Petersen had higher motives for the illegal money transfer and was
- "worthy of a break," as Judge Wilson put it, occupied much of the discussion
- in court Monday. Lichtman argued strenuously that his client had a compelling
- reason for skipping bail and disappearing and did not deserve additional
- prison time.
-
- Later, Lichtman said Petersen and those close to him may never have been
- harassed by the other hacker if he had not agreed to cooperate with the
- government.
-
- But Wilson ultimately agreed with the U.S. attorney's office that
- Petersen's sentence should be lengthened because of his flight, particularly
- after he "thumbed his nose at the government" that had initially offered him
- a deal for his cooperation.
-
- "Here's a person," Wilson said, "who's in the middle of a sweetheart deal
- and then absconds and commits a bunch more of the same crimes."
-
- The longest prison sentence ever received by a hacker is being served by
- Poulsen, who was recently ordered to spend 51 months in a federal
- penitentiary for a series of computer crimes, including the radio contest
- rigging. Because ofthe time he's already served -- Poulsen has been in
- custody since 1991 -- he is expected to be released by the end of May.
-
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