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- PHREAKERS CAUGHT
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-
- from the Los Angeles Times of June 11, 1982 (page 1 of the "Metro" section):
-
- 'Phone Phreak' Sentenced to 150-Day Term
-
-
- By Ted Rohrlich,
- Times Staff Writer
-
- Lewis DePayne was sentenced to 150 days in jail Thursday for extremely poor
- relations with Ma Bell.
-
- DePayne, 22, first came to the attention of Pacific Telephone Co. officials
- in 1979, when they say they discovered that he had gained unauthorized access to
- their communications and computer systems.
-
- DePayne, a computer science student at the time, used the access to disconnect
- phone service for people he did not like, and to add--for free--special
- features, such as call-forwarding and call-waiting services, to his own phone
- and those of his friends, according to phone company officials.
-
- Pacific Telephone's retired general security manager, W. F. Bowren, said
- that in late 1979 DePayne admitted involvement in setting nine fires on
- telephone company property, resulting in $250,000 in damage.
-
- Bowren told Superior Court Judge Diane Wayne that DePayne admitted to phone
- company investigators that he and some friends got access to ground-level
- telephone terminals, cut wiring inside the terminals, and then set the terminals
- on fire.
-
- Terminals are boxes, usually attached to telephone poles, that house
- connections between underground cables and above-ground branch lines leading to
- homes and businesses. Bowren's comments came in a letter that was made part of
- the court record.
-
- Bowren's letter said that DePayne also told investigators that he and others
- had rewired one terminal in such a way that it allowed them to make phone calls
- anywhere and to have charges for those calls applied to someone else's bill.
- The resulting loss to the phone company was more than $15,000, Bowren said.
-
- Bowren went on to say that the telephone company declined to press charges
- against DePayne because DePayne said that he had seen the error of his ways.
-
- But, his letter continued, DePayne was subsequently interviewed in a weekly
- newspaper and boasted of "infiltrating and compromising our system."
-
- Bowren was apparently referring to an article that appeared in the L.A.
- Weekly in July, 1981, about a "phone phreak" identified as "Rosco."
-
- Rosco was touted as "probably the most knowledgeable phone phreak in the
- country" whose pranks included posing as a telephone company supervisor and
- causing all calls normally routed through the phone company's Pasadena office to
- be rerouted elsewhere.
-
- Witnesses at a court hearing for DePayne testified that he used the nickname
- Rosco.
-
- That hearing was held to determine whether DePayne should be ordered to stand
- trial on charges that he broke into a Pacific Telephone Co. office in May,
- 1981, and stole operating manuals for the company's central computer system.
-
- A district attorney's investigator on the case has said those manuals could
- have been used to shut down much of Los Angeles' phone system.
-
- While facing theft, burglary, and conspiracy charges in the case, DePayne
- wrote a letter to the president of Pacific Telephone, Bowren said.
-
- "He had the unmitigated gall...(to try to) sell his service to us as a
- consultant," Bowren wrote.
-
- In court, DePayne pleaded no contest to a charge of conspiracy to commit
- computer fraud against Pacific Telephone and to a separate charge against a San
- Francisco-based computer leasing firm. Burglary and grand theft charges were
- dropped.
-
- A confederate, Mark Ross, 25, pleaded no contest to a charge of grand theft of
- telephone company computer manuals.
-
- Wayne placed them both on probation for three years and ordered Ross to jail
- for 30 days, to be served on weekends.
-
- She stayed the 150-day jail term for DePayne for three weeks to give him an
- opportunity to apply for participation in the county's work furlough program.
-
- Deputy Dist. Atty. Clifton Garrott said DePayne makes his living as a
- systems analyst for computer consulting firms.
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