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- 2600 Magazine's story on the Private Sector Bust
- Uploaded by Elric of Imrryr
- Lunatic Labs Unlimited
- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- Typed By Shooting Shark : The following article appeared in the August, 1985
- issue of 2600 Magazine. Subscriptions to 2600 are $12 a year for individuals.
- Make checks payable to 2600 Enterprises, Inc. Write to: 2600, Box 752, Middle
- Island, NY 11953-0752. Their phone number is 516-751-2600. Text of article
- follows.
-
- SEIZED!
- 2600 Bulletin Board is Implicated in Raid on Jersey Hackers
-
- On July 12, 1985, law enforcement officials seized the Private Sector BBS,
- the official computer bulletin board of 2600 magazine, for "complicity in
- computer theft," under the newly passed, and yet untested, New Jersey Statute
- 2C:20-25. Police had uncovered in April a credit carding ring operated around
- a Middlesex County electronic bulletin board, and from there investigated
- other North Jersey bulletin boards. Not understanding subject matter of the
- Private Sector BBS, police assumed that the sysop was involved in illegal
- activities. Six other computers were also seized in this investigation,
- including those of Store Manager [perhaps they mean Swap Shop Manager? -
- Shark] who ran a BBS of his own, Beowolf, Red Barchetta, the Vampire, NJ Hack
- Shack, sysop of the NJ Hack Shack BBS, and that of the sysop of the Treasure
- Chest BBS.
-
- Immediately after this action, members of 2600 contacted the media, who
- were completely unaware of any of the raids. They began to bombard the
- Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office with questions and a press conference was
- announced for July 16. The system operator of the Private Sector BBS attempted
- to attend along with reporters from 2600. They were effectively thrown off
- the premises. Threats were made to charge them with trespassing and other
- crimes. An officer who had at first received them civilly was threatened with
- the loss of his job if he didn't get them removed promptly. Then the car was
- chased out of the parking lot. Perhaps prosecutor Alan Rockoff was afraid that
- he presence of some technically literate reporters would ruin the effect of his
- press release on the public. As it happens, he didn't need our help.
-
- The next day the details of the press conference were reported to the
- public by the press. As Rockoff intended, paranoia about hackers ran rampant.
- Headlines got as ridiculous as hackers ordering tank parts by telephone from
- TRW and moving satellites with their home computers in order to make free phone
- calls. These and even more exotic stories were reported by otherwise
- respectable media sources. The news conference understandably made the front
- page of most of the major newspapers in the US, and was a major news item as
- far away as Australia and in the United Kingdom due to the sensationalism of
- the claims. We will try to explain why these claims may have been made in this
- issue.
-
- On July 18 the operator of The Private Sector was formally charged
- with"computer conspiracy" under the above law, and released in the custody of
- his parents. The next day the American Civil Liberties Union took over his
- defense. The ACLU commented that it would be very hard for Rockoff to prove a
- conspiracy just "because the same information, construed by the prosecutor to
- be illegal, appears on two bulletin boards." especially as Rockoff admitted
- that "he did not believe any of the defendants knew each other." The ACLU
- believes that the system operator's rights were violated, as he was assumed to
- be involved in an illegal activity just because of other people under
- investigation who happened to have posted messages on his board.
-
- In another statement which seems to confirm Rockoff's belief in guilt by
- association, he announced the next day that "630 people were being investigated
- to determine if any used their computer equipment fraudulently." We believe
- this is only the user list of the NJ Hack Shack, so the actual list of those to
- be investigated may turn out to be almost 5 times that. The sheer overwhelming
- difficulty of this task may kill this investigation, especially as they find
- that many hackers simply leave false information. Computer hobbyists all
- across the country have already been called by the Bound Brook, New Jersey
- office of the FBI. They reported that the FBI agents used scare tactics in
- order to force confessions or to provoke them into turning in others. We would
- like to remind those who get called that there is nothing inherently wrong or
- illegal in calling any ANY BBS, nor in talking about ANY activity. The FBI
- would not comment on the case as it is an "ongoing investigation" and in the
- hands of the local prosecutor. They will soon find that many on the Private
- Sector BBS's user list are data processing managers, telecommunications
- security people, and others who are interested in the subject of the BBS,
- hardly the underground community of computer criminals depicted at the news
- conference. The Private Sector BBS was a completely open BBS, and police and
- security people were even invited on in order to participate. The BBS was far
- from the "elite" type of underground telecom boards that Rockoff attempted to
- portray.
-
- Within two days, Rockoff took back almost all of the statements he had
- made at the news conference, as AT&T and the DoD [Department of Defense -
- Shark] discounted the claims he had made. He was understandably unable to find
- real proof of Private Sector's alleged illegal activity, and was faced with
- having to return the computer equipment with nothing to show for his effort.
- Rockoff panicked, and on July 31, the system operator had a new charge against
- him, "wiring up his computer as a blue box." Apparently this was referring to
- his Novation Applecat modem which is capable of generating any hertz tone over
- the phone line. By this stretch of imagination an Applecat could produce a
- 2600 hertz tone as well as the MF which is necessary for "blue boxing."
- However, each and every other owner of an Applecat or any other modem that can
- generate its own tones therefore has also "wired up his computer as a blue box"
- by merely installing the modem. This charge is so ridiculous that Rockoff
- probably will never bother to press it. However, the wording of WIRING UP THE
- COMPUTER gives rockoff an excuse to continue to hold onto the computer longer
- in his futile search for illegal activity.
-
- "We have requested that the prosecutors give us more specific
- information," said Arthur Miller, the lawyer for The Private Sector. "The
- charges are so vague that we can't really present a case at this point."
- Miller will appear in court on August 16 to obtain this information. He is
- also issuing a demand for the return of the equipment and, if the prosecutors
- don't cooperate, will commence court proceedings against them. "They haven't
- been particularly cooperative," he said.
-
- Rockoff probably will soon reconsider taking Private Sector's case to
- court, as he will have to admit he just didn't know what he was doing when he
- seized the BBS. The arrest warrant listed only "computer conspiracy" against
- Private Sector, which is much more difficult to prosecute than the multitude of
- charges against some of the other defendants, which include credit card fraud,
- toll fraud, the unauthorized entry into computers, and numerous others.
-
- Both Rockoff and the ACLU mentioned the Supreme Court in their press
- releases, but he will assuredly take one of his stronger cases to test the new
- New Jersey computer crime law. by seizing the BBS just because of supposed
- activities discussed on it, Rockoff raises constitutional questions. Darrell
- Paster, a lawyer who centers much of his work on computer crime, says the New
- Jersey case is "just another example of local law enforcement getting on the
- bandwagon of crime that has come into vogue to prosecute, and they have
- proceeded with very little technical understanding, and in the process they
- have abused many people's constitutional rights. What we have developing is a
- mini witch hunt which is analogous to some of the arrests at day care centers,
- where they sweep in and arrest everybody, ruin reputations, and then find that
- there is only one or two guilty parties." We feel that law enforcement, not
- understanding the information on the BBS, decided to strike first and ask
- questions later.
-
- 2600 magazine and the sysops of the Private Sector BBS stand fully behind
- the system operator. As soon as the equipment is returned, the BBS will go
- back up. We ask all our readers to do their utmost to support us in our
- efforts, and to educate as many of the public as possible that a hacker is not
- a computer criminal. We are all convinced of our sysop's innocence, and await
- Rockoff's dropping of the charges.
-
- NOTE: Readers will notice that our reporting of the events are quite different
- than those presented in the media and by the Middlesex County Prosecutor. We
- can only remind you that we are much closer to the events at hand than the
- media is, and that we are much more technologically literate than the Middlesex
- County Prosecutor's Office. The Middlesex County Prosecutor has already taken
- back many of his statements, after the contentions were disproven by AT&T and
- the DoD. One problem is that the media and the police tend to treat the seven
- cases as one case, thus the charges against and activities of some of the
- hackers has been extended to all of the charged. We at 2600 can only speak
- about the case of Private Sector.
-
-