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- ==Phrack Inc.==
-
- Volume Two, Issue 23, File 9 of 12
-
- <?><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><?>
- <|> <|>
- <|> Can You Find Out If Your Telephone Is Tapped? <|>
- <|> by Fred P. Graham <|>
- <|> <|>
- <|> "It Depends On Who You Ask" <|>
- <|> <|>
- <|> Transcribed by VaxCat <|>
- <|> <|>
- <|> December 30, 1988 <|>
- <|> <|>
- <?><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><?>
-
-
- Unlike most Americans, who suspect it, Sarah Bartlett at least knows she was
- overheard by an F.B.I. wiretap in the computer room of the Internal Revenue
- Service Building in Washington, across the street from the Justice Department.
- On April 25, as she sat at her card-punch machine, the postman handed her a
- registered letter containing a document known in police circles as a "wiretap
- notice." It told her that the Government had been given permission to
- intercept wire communications "to and from" two Washington telephones for a
- period of fifteen days after January 13, and that during this period her own
- voice had been heard talking to the parties on those phones. Miss Bartlett
- said nothing to the other girls in the computer room, but she must have been
- stunned. A few weeks later, federal agents came to the computer room and took
- her away, to face a variety of charges that amounted to being a runner for a
- numbers game.
-
- There are no figures to disclose how many Americans have received such wiretap
- messages, and few people who have gotten them have spoken out. But the number
- could be over 50,000 by now. When Congress enacted the requirement in 1968
- that notice of wiretap be given, it intended to sweep away the growing sense of
- national paranoia about electronic snoopery. But there seems to be an unabated
- national suspicion that almost everybody who is anybody is being tapped or
- bugged by somebody else. Herman Schwartz, a Buffalo, New York, law professor
- who is the American Civil Liberties Union's expert on Governmental
- eavesdropping, estimates that since 1968 between 150,000 and 250,000 Americans
- have been overheard by the Big Ear of the Federal Government or local police.
- "If you have anything to do with gambling or drugs, or if you're a public
- official involved in any hanky-panky and if you're a Democrat, or if you or
- your friends are involved in radical politics or black activism, you've
- probably been bugged," Professor Schwartz says.
-
- Henry Kissinger wisecracks to friends that he won't have to write his memoirs,
- he'll just publish the F.B.I.'s transcripts of his telephone calls. Richard G.
- Kleindienst has had his Justice Department office "swept." Secretary of State
- William P. Rogers once shied away from discussing China policy over a liberal
- newspaper columnist's line. High-ranking officials in New York, Washington and
- Albany have been notified by the New York District Attorney's office that they
- may become targets of blackmailers because their visits to a swanky Manhattan
- whorehouse were recorded on hidden bugs. The technician who regularly sweeps
- the office of Maryland Governor Marvin Mandel, checking the Civil Defense
- hot-line telephone he had been instructed not to touch, recently found it was
- wired to bug the room while resting on the hook. Democratic officials waxed
- indignant over the five characters with Republican connections who were caught
- attempting to bug the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the
- Watergate hotel, but when they had earlier found less conclusive proof of the
- same kind of activity, they let it pass without public comment. The Omnibus
- Crime Control Act of 1968 makes it a crime, punishable by five years in jail
- and a $10,000 fine, to eavesdrop on a telephone call or a private conversation
- without a court order. Only federal law-enforcement officials and local
- prosecutors in states that have adopted similar wiretap legislation can get
- court permission to wiretap, and the law requires that within ninety days after
- a listening device is unplugged, wiretap notices must be sent to everyone whose
- phones or premises were bugged, plus anyone else (like Sarah Bartlett) who was
- overheard and might later be prosecuted because of it.
-
- However, because of some private investigators and snoopy individuals nobody
- knows how many are ignoring the law against eavesdropping and getting away with
- it, and because none of the rules governing court-approved wiretapping in
- ordinary criminal investigations applies to the Federal Government's
- warrantless wiretapping in the name of "national security," no one can be
- certain his phone is safe. Before the Supreme Court ruled, 8 to 0, last June
- that the Government must get warrants for its wiretapping of domestic radicals
- in national-security cases, the F.B.I. wiretapped both homegrown and foreign
- "subversives" without court orders. The best estimates were that this
- accounted for between 54,000 and 162,000 of the 150,000 to 250,000 people who
- were overheard since 1968.
-
- With warrantless wiretapping of domestic radicals now outlawed, the number of
- persons overheard on warrantless devices is expected to be reduced by about one
- fourth. But even with the courts requiring that more Government bugging be
- reported to the victims, paranoia is fed by improved technology. Bugging has
- now developed to the point that it is extremely difficult to detect, and even
- harder to trace to the eavesdropper. The hottest item these days is the
- telephone "hook-switch bypass," which circumvents the cutoff switch on a phone
- and turns it into a sensitive bug, soaking up all the sounds in the room while
- the telephone is sitting on its cradle. In its most simple form, a little
- colored wire is added to the jumble of wires inside a telephone and it is about
- as easy to detect as an additional strand in a plate of spaghetti. Even if it
- is found, the eavesdropper probably won't be. A check of the telephone line
- would most likely turn up a tiny transmitter in a terminal box elsewhere in the
- building or somewhere down the street on a pole. This would probably be
- broadcasting to a voice-activated tape recorder locked in the trunk of a car
- parked somewhere in the neighborhood. It would be impossible to tell which one
- it was.
-
- My wife happened to learn about this at the time last year when The New York
- Times locked horns with the Justice Department over the Pentagon Papers, and I
- was covering the story for The Times. She became convinced that John Mitchell
- would stop at nothing and that the telephone in our bedroom was hot as a poker.
- After that, whenever a wifely chewing-out or amorous doings were brewing, I was
- always forewarned. If anything was about to happen in the bedroom too
- sensitive for the outside world to hear, my wife would first rise from the bed,
- cross the room, and ceremoniously unplug the telephone. "When someone finds out
- somebody else learned something they didn't want them to know, they usually
- jump to the conclusion they've been bugged," says Allan D. Bell Jr., president
- of Dektor Counterintelligence and Security Inc., in Springfield, Virginia,
- outside Washington. "If they thought about it, there was probably some other,
- easier way it got out."
-
- Bell's point is that most people get information in the easiest, cheapest and
- most legal way, and that the person whose secrets have been compromised should
- consider first if he's thrown away carbons, left his files unlocked, hired a
- secretary who could be bribed, or just talked too much. There's an important
- exception, however, that many people don't know about. A party to a
- conversation can secretly record it, without violating any law. A person on
- one end of a telephone call can quietly record the conversation (the old legal
- requirement of a periodic warning beep is gone). Also, one party to a
- face-to-face conversation can secret a hidden recorder in his clothing. James
- R. Robinson, the Justice Department lawyer in charge of prosecuting those who
- get caught violating the anti-bugging law, insists that it is relatively rarely
- broken. He debunks the notion that most private eavesdropping is done in the
- executive suites of big business. Sex, not corporate intrigue, is behind
- ninety percent of the complaints he gets. After giving the snoopy spouse or
- lover a good scare, the Government doesn't even bother to prosecute
- do-it-yourself wiretappers. If a private investigator did the bugging, they
- throw the book at him.
-
- Cost is the reason why experts insist there's less wiretapping than most people
- think. Private investigators who use electronic surveillance don't quote their
- prices these days, but people in the de-bugging business say the cost can range
- from $10,000 per month for a first-rate industrial job to $150 per day for the
- average private detective.
-
- High costs also limit Government wiretapping. Last year the average F.B.I. tap
- cost $600 per day, including installing the device, leasing telephone lines to
- connect the bugs to F.B.I. offices, monitoring the conversations and typing the
- transcripts. Considering the informative quality of most persons'
- conversations, it isn't worth it. Court records of the F.B.I.'s surveillances
- have demonstrated that when unguarded conversations are recorded, the result is
- most likely to be a transcript that is uninformative, inane or
- incomprehensible.
-
- The folklore of what to do to thwart electronic surveillance is almost
- uniformly misguided or wrong. Robert F. Kennedy, when he was Senator, was said
- to have startled a visitor by springing into the air and banging his heels down
- onto his office floor. He explained this was to jar loose any bug J. Edgar
- Hoover might have planted. Whether he was teasing or not, experts say it
- wouldn't have done anything except bruise Senator Kennedy's heels. Former
- Senator Ralph Yarborough of Texas used to complain that, as each election
- season approached, the reception in his office phone would fade as the current
- was sapped by the multiple wiretaps installed by his political enemies. Those
- people who think poor reception and clicking on the line are due to wiretapping
- are giving wiretappers less credit and AT&T more, than either deserves.
- Present-day wiretaps are frequently powered by their own batteries, or they
- drain so little current that the larger normal power fluctuations make them
- undetectable, even with sensitive current meters.
-
- Clicks on the line can be caused by loose connections in the phone, cables, or
- central office equipment, wet cables, defective switches in the central office,
- and power surges when batteries in the central office are charged. A
- sophisticated wiretap records conversations on a machine that turns itself
- silently on and off as you speak. The tap is designed to work without
- extraneous noises; your telephone isn't. If things you say in private or on
- the telephone seem to be coming back to you from unlikely sources, your first
- step should be to make a careful check of the room or rooms that might be
- bugged.
-
- If the Federal Government is doing the eavesdropping, neither you nor any but
- the most experienced antibugging experts will detect it. Nobody has discovered
- a Justice Department wiretap for years, because the telephone company itself
- often taps the line and connects it to an FBI listening post. FBI bugs have
- become so sophisticated that the normal sweep techniques won't detect them,
- either. But the kind of eavesdropping that is being done by many private
- investigators is often so crude that even another amateur can find it. Room
- bugs come in two types: tiny microphones that send their interceptions to the
- outside by wire, and little radio transmitters that radio their overhearings to
- the outside.
-
- Both are likely to be installed in electrical fixtures, because their power can
- be borrowed, their wires can be used to transmit the conversations to the
- listening post, and the fixtures' electrical innards serve as camouflage for
- the electric bugs. Your telephone has all these attributes, plus three
- built-in amplifiers the eavesdropper can borrow. You should first remove the
- plastic cover from your telephone's body and check inside for a wire of odd
- size or shape that seems to cut across the normal flow of the circuits. A bug
- or radio transmitter that feeds on your telephone's power and amplifiers will
- be a thimble-sized cylinder or cube, usually encased in black epoxy and wired
- into the circuit terminals.
-
- Also check for the same devices along the telephone lines in the room or in the
- jack or box where the phone is attached to the baseboard. You should also
- unscrew the mouthpiece and earpiece to check for suspicious wires or objects.
- Even an expert would not detect a new item that's being sold illegally, a
- bugged mouthpiece that looks just like the one now in your telephone, and which
- can be switched with yours in a few seconds. After the phone check, look for
- suspicious little black forms wired into television sets, radios, lamps and
- clocks.
-
- Also check heating and air-conditioning ducts for mikes with wires running back
- into the ducts. Radio transmitter bugs that have their own batteries can be
- quickly installed, but they can also be easier to find. Check under tables and
- chairs, and between sofa cushions. Remember they need to be near the point of
- likely conversations to assure good reception. Sometimes radio bugs are so
- cleverly concealed they are almost impossible to detect. A German manufacturer
- advertises bugged fountain pens that actually write, table cigarette lighters
- that actually light, and briefcases that actually carry briefs.
-
- Noting that the owner of such items can absent himself from delicate
- negotiations and leave his electronic ear behind, the company observes that
- "obviously, a microphone of this type opens untold opportunities during
- conferences, negotiations, talks, etc." If you suspect that your telephone has
- been tapped and your own visual inspection shows nothing, you can request the
- telephone company to check the line. The American Telephone and Telegraph
- Company estimates it gets about ten thousand requests from customers per year
- to check out their lines. These checks, plus routine repair service, turn up
- evidence of about two hundred fifty listening devices each year. When evidence
- of a tap is found, the company checks with the FBI and with local police in
- states where the laws permit police wiretapping with court orders. Until
- recently, if the tap was a court-approved job, the subscriber was assured that
- "no illegal device" was on the line. This proved so unsettling to the persons
- who requested the checks that now the telephone company says it tells all
- subscribers about any taps found. If this includes premature tidings of a
- court-approved FBI tap, that's a hassle that AT&T is content to leave to the
- Government and its suspect.
-
- For those who have done the above and are still suspicious, the next step up in
- defensive measures is to employ an expert to de-bug your premises. A thorough
- job involves a minute inspection of the premises, including X-ray pictures of
- desk ornaments and other items that might contain hidden radio transmitters,
- the use of metal detectors to search out hidden microphones, checks of the
- electrical wiring for signs of unusual currents, and the use of a sensitive
- radio-wave detector to find any stray transmissions that a hidden bug might be
- giving out, plus employment of a radio field-strength meter to locate the bug.
-
- With so much expertise required to do a sound detection job, and with no
- licensing requirements in most states to bar anybody from clapping on earphones
- and proclaiming himself an expert de-bugger, it is not surprising that the
- field abounds with quacks. A Pennsylvania construction company that had lost a
- series of close bids hired a local private detective last year to sweep its
- boardroom for bugs. The company's security chief, taking a dim view of the
- outside hotshot, took an ordinary walkie-talkie, taped its on-button down for
- steady transmission, and hid it behind the books on a shelf. He sat in a room
- down the hall and listened as the detective clumped into the room, swept around
- with his electronic devices, and pronounced the room clean.
-
- Sometimes bogus de-buggers will give clients something extra for their money by
- planting a device and finding it during their sweep. One "expert" tried this
- twice in Las Vegas with organized-crime figures, who later compared notes and
- concluded they'd been taken. "Boy, was he sorry," chortled the Justice
- Department attorney who related the story. If you nevertheless want to have
- your place swept, things are complicated by the telephone company's ban on
- advertising by de-buggers.
-
- As the Missouri Public Service Commission put it when it upheld the telephone
- company's refusal to include "de-bugging" in a detective's yellow-page ad,
- "advertising the ability to detect and remove electrical devices was, in fact,
- also advertising the ability to place those same devices. Anyone can be pretty
- certain of a reliable job by trying one of the major national detective
- agencies, Burns, Pinkerton or Wackenhut. They charge $40 to $60 per man-hour,
- for a job that will probably take two men a half day at least. They specialize
- in industrial work and shy away from domestic-relations matters. So if that's
- your problem, ask a lawyer or police official which private investigator in
- town is the most reliable de-bugger around.
-
- It may seem too obvious to bear mentioning, but don't discuss your suspicions
- about eavesdropping in the presence of the suspected bug. W. R. Moseley,
- director of the Burns agency's investigations operations, say in probably a
- majority of the cases, a bugging victim tips off the eavesdropper that he's
- going to call in a de-bugger, thus giving the eavesdropper an opportunity to
- cover his tracks.
-
- For the person who wants to have as much privacy as money can buy, the Dektor
- company is marketing a console about the size of a Manhattan telephone book
- which, for only $3,500, you can purchase to sit on your office desk and run a
- constant check on the various things that might be done to your telephone and
- electric lines to overhear your conversations. It will block out any effort to
- turn your phone into a bug, will detect any harmonica bug, smother out any
- telephone tap using a transmitter to broadcast overheard conversations, detect
- any use of the electric lines for bugging purposes, and give off a frantic
- beep-beep! if anyone picks up an extension phone.
-
- As sophisticated as this device is, there is one thing its promoters won't say
- it will do, detect a wiretap by the FBI. With the connection made in a place
- where no de-bugger will be allowed to check, and the G-men monitoring it on
- equipment no meter will detect, you can simply never know if the Government is
- listening. So if you're a businessman and think you're bugged by competitors,
- you're probably wrong. If you're a spouse or lover whose amours have gone
- public, the listening device can be found but probably nothing will be done
- about it. And if you're being listened to by the Biggest Ear of all, the
- Government, you'll never really know until you get your "wiretap notice."
-
-
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