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-
- ==Phrack Magazine==
-
- Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 13 of 27
-
- [My Bust Continued]
-
-
- IX. Consultations
-
- Dale and I began to consider options in our battle against this senseless
- investigation. We spent many nights pondering the issue, and arrived at a
- number of conclusions.
-
- Since we had already talked to the police, and were rapidly realizing
- what a vast error that had been, we wondered how it was possible
- to sidestep, avoid or derail the investigation. We hoped that Ron
- Gere and others would not be held accountable for my actions, a wish
- that was to be denied.
-
- A great deal of resentment existed toward me in those whose
- lives were affected, and I would be either an idiot or a liar to deny
- that my actions affected many people, in many places, some of whom I
- had never even met in person. However, I was unable to do anything
- for many of these people, so I concentrated largely on my own survival
- and that of those near me.
-
- Dale and I decided, eventually, that the only person who could claim
- any real damage was Dhamir Mannai, and we arranged an
- appointment with him to discuss what had happened.
-
- We met in his book-lined office in the Electrical Engineering Office,
- and shook hands before beginning a discussion. I explained what
- I had done, and why I had done it, and apologized for any damages that
- had occurred. Dale, similarly, excused my actions, and while he had
- nothing to do with them, noted that he was under investigation as well.
-
- We offered to help repair the /etc/groups file which I had damaged,
- but due to the circumstances, it is understandable that he politely
- declined our offer.
-
- Dhamir was surprisingly sympathetic, though justifiably angered. However,
- after about a half hour of discussion, he warmed from suspicion to
- friendliness, and after two hours of discussion he offered to testify
- for us against the police, noting that he had been forced on two previous
- occasions to testify against police. He held a very dim
- view of the investigation, and noted that "The police have bungled the case
- very badly." Dhamir, in fact, was so annoyed by the investigation that he
- called Wayne that night to object to it. He made it clear that he
- intended to oppose the police.
-
- The next night, as Dale and I were entering the Music Building, a police
- cruiser came to a sudden stop in the parking lot and Wayne walked up to
- us with a perturbed expression.
-
- Without pausing for greetings, he informed us that he was now
- considering filing additional charges against us for "Tampering with
- Witnesses," without identifying the witness. In his eyes, the legality
- of restraining our actions and speech based on hypothetical and unfiled
- charges was not relevant; and he was angry that a primary witness had
- been rendered useless to him.
-
- Finally, we talked more informally. Genuinely curious about his
- motivations, we asked him about the investigation and what turns
- could be expected in the future. Realizing that the investigation
- had entered a quiescent stage and we would not likely meet again
- until court, we talked with him.
-
- Dale said "So let me get this straight. They saddled the older,
- more experienced cop with the recruit?"
-
- Wayne didn't answer, but nodded glumly.
-
- "What's this like for you?" I asked.
-
- "Well, I have to admit, in my twenty-three years on the force,
- this case is the biggest hassle I've ever had."
-
- "I can see why," said Dale.
-
- "I almost wish you had been in charge of this case, instead of that
- goof Jeff," I said.
-
- "Yes, he's too jumpy," said Dale. "Like an Irish Setter with a gun."
-
- "Well, if I'd been in charge of this case," Wayne said, "it would have
- been down the pike a long time ago."
-
- After more discussion of this sort, Wayne's walkie-talkie burst into
- cop chatter.
-
- "We have three men, throwing another man, into a dumpster, behind
- Willard," the voice said.
-
- "I guess this means you have to leave, Wayne," said Dale.
-
- Wayne looked embarrassed. We exchanged farewells.
-
- Another very helpful person was Professor Richard Devon,
- of the Science, Technology and Science department of Penn State. We
- read an article he wrote on the computer underground which, while
- hardly condoning malicious hacking, certainly objected to the prevailing
- witch-hunt mentality. We contacted him to discuss the case.
-
- He offered to provide testimony in our behalf, and informed us
- of the prevailing attitudes of computer security professionals at
- Penn State and elsewhere. He corroborated our belief that the
- vendetta against us was largely due to the fact that we had embarrassed
- Penn State, and that the intensity of the investigation was also largely
- due to fallout from the Morris Worm incident.
-
- The fact that he was on the board of directors for the Engineering Computer
- Lab increased the value of his testimony. We were expecting damaging
- testimony from Bryan Jensen of ECL.
-
- He was friendly and personable, and we talked for several hours.
-
- While there was nothing he could do until the time came to give testimony,
- it was very gratifying to find two friends and allies in what we had
- thought was a hostile camp.
-
- Our feeling of isolation and paranoia began to dwindle, and we began to
- feel more confident about the possible outcome of the investigation.
-
-
- X. Going Upstairs
-
- With a new-found confidence, we decided to see if it were possible to
- end this investigation entirely before charges were filed and it
- became a criminal prosecution.
-
- Dale called the Director of Police Services with the slim hope that
- he had no knowledge of this investigation and might intervene to stop
- it. No dice.
-
- Dale and I composed a letter to the district attorney objecting to
- the investigation, also in the hopes of avoiding the prosecution of
- the case. I include the letter:
-
-
- Dear Mr. Gricar:
-
- We are writing to you because of our concerns regarding an investigation
- being conducted by the Pennsylvania State University Department of
- University Safety with respect to violations of Pa.C.S.A. tilde 3933
- (Unlawful Use of Computer) alleged to us. We have enclosed a copy of
- this statute for your convenience.
-
- Despite recommendations from NASA security officials and concerned members
- of the professional and academic computing community that we file suit
- against the Pennsylvania State Universities, we have tried earnestly to
- accommodate this investigation.
-
- We have cooperated fully with Police Services Officers Wayne Weaver
- and Jeffrey Jones at every opportunity in this unnecessary eight-week
- investigation. However, rather than arranging for direct communication
- between the complaining parties and us to make it possible to make clear
- the nature of our activities, the University Police have chosen to siphon
- information to these parties in an easily-misinterpreted and secondhand
- manner. This has served only to obscure the truth of the matter and create
- confusion, misunderstanding and inconvenience to all involved.
-
- The keen disappointment of the University Police in finding that we have
- not been involved in espionage, electronic funds transfer or computer
- terrorism appears to have finally manifested itself in an effort to
- indict us for practices customary and routine among faculty and students
- alike. While we have come to realize that activities such as using a
- personal account with the permission of the authorized user may constitute
- a violation of an obscure and little-known University policy, we find it
- irregular and unusual that such activities might even be considered a
- criminal offense.
-
- The minimal and inferential evidence which either will
- or has already been brought before you is part of a preposterous attempt to
- shoehorn our alleged actions into the jurisdiction of a law which lacks
- relevance to a situation of this nature.
-
- We have found this whole affair to be capricious and arbitrary, and despite
- our reasonable requests to demonstrate and display our activities in the
- presence of computer-literate parties and with an actual computer, they
- have, for whatever reasons, denied direct lines of communication which
- could have enabled an expeditious resolution to this problem.
-
- This investigation has proceeded in a slipshod manner, rife with inordinate
- delays and intimidation well beyond that justified by an honest desire to
- discern the truth. While certain evidence may appear to warrant scrutiny,
- this evidence is easily clarified; and should the District Attorney's
- office desire, we would be pleased to provide a full and complete
- accounting of all our activities at your convenience and under oath.
-
- In view of the judicial system being already overtaxed by an excess of
- important and pressing criminal cases, we would like to apologize for
- this matter even having encroached on your time.
-
- Sincerely yours,
-
-
-
- Dale Garrison
- Robert W. F. Clark
-
-
- This letter had about as much effect as might be imagined, that is to
- say, none whatever.
-
- My advice from this experience is that it is very likely that you will
- be able to find advice in what you might think to be a hostile quarter.
- To talk to the complaining party and apologize for any damage you might
- have caused is an excellent idea, and has a possibility of getting the
- charges reduced or perhaps dropped entirely.
-
- Simply because the police list a person as a complaining party does not
- necessarily mean that the person necessarily approves of, or even has
- knowledge of, the police proceedings. In all likelihood, the complaining
- parties have never met you, and have no knowledge of what your
- motivations were in doing what you did. With no knowledge of your motives,
- they are likely to attribute your actions to malice.
-
- If there are no demonstrable damages, and the person is sympathetic, you
- may find an ally in the enemy camp. Even if you have damaged a machine,
- you are in a unique position to help repair it, and prevent further
- intrusion into their system.
-
- Regardless of the end result, it can't hurt to get some idea of what
- the complaining parties think. If you soften outright hostility and
- outrage even to a grudging tolerance, you have improved the chance
- of a positive outcome.
-
- While the police may object to this in very strong terms, and make dire
- and ambiguous threats, without a restraining order of some kind there
- is very little they can do unless you have bribed or otherwise
- offered a consideration for testimony.
-
- Talking to the police, on the other hand, is a very bad idea, and
- will result in disaster. Regardless of any threats and intimidation they
- use, there is absolutely nothing they can do to you if you do not
- talk to them. Any deal they offer you is bogus, a flat-out lie. They
- do not have the authority to offer you a deal. These two facts can not
- be stressed enough. This may seem common knowledge, the sort even an
- idiot would know. I knew it myself.
-
- However, from inexperience and arrogance I thought myself immune
- to the rules. I assumed that talking to them could damage nothing,
- since I had done nothing wrong but make a mistake. Certainly
- this was just a misunderstanding, and I could easily clear it up.
-
- The police will encourage you to believe this, and before you realize it
- you will have told them everything they want to know.
-
- Simply, if you are not under arrest, walk away. If you are
- under arrest, request an attorney.
-
- Realize that I, a confirmed paranoid, knowing and having heard this
- warning from other people, still fell into the trap of believing myself
- able to talk my way out of prosecution. Don't do the same thing
- yourself, either from fear or arrogance.
-
- Don't tell them anything. They'll find out more than enough without
- your help.
-
-
- XI. Interlude
-
- Finally, after what had seemed nearly two weeks of furious activity,
- constant harassment and disasters, the investigation entered a more
- or less quiescent state. It was to remain in this state for several
- months.
-
- This is not to say that the harassment ceased, or that matters improved.
- The investigation seemed to exist in a state of suspended animation, from
- our viewpoint. Matters ceased getting worse exponentially.
- Now, they merely got worse arithmetically.
-
- My parents ejected me from home for the second time due to my
- grades. They did not know about the police investigation. I
- was in no hurry to tell them about it. I could have went to live
- with my father, but instead I returned to State College by bus, with no
- money, no prospects and no place to live. I blamed the police
- investigation for my grades, which was not entirely correct. I
- doubt, however, that I would have failed as spectacularly as I had
- if the police had not entered my life.
-
- Over the Christmas break, when the campus was mostly vacant, Dale
- noticed a new set of booted footprints in the new-fallen snow every
- night, by the window to the Electronic Music Lab, and by that window
- only.
-
- A few times, I heard static and odd clicks on the telephone at
- the Lab, but whether this was poor telephone service or some
- clumsy attempt at a wiretap I can not say with assurance.
-
- I discovered that my food card was still valid, so
- I had a source of free food for a while. I had switched to a
- nocturnal sleep cycle, so I slept during the day in the Student Union
- Building, rose for a shower in the Athletics Building at about midnight,
- and hung out in the Electronic Music Lab at night. Being homeless is not as
- difficult as might be imagined, especially in a university environment,
- as long as one does not look homeless. Even if one does look scruffy,
- this will raise few eyebrows on a campus.
-
- Around this time, I switched my main interest from computer hacking to
- reading and writing poetry, being perhaps the thousandth neophyte poet
- to use Baudelaire as a model. I suppose that I was striving to create
- perfection from imperfect materials, also my motivation for hacking.
-
- Eventually, Dale offered to let me split the rent with him on a room.
- The police had 'suggested' that WPSX-TV3 fire him from his job as an
- audio technician. Regardless of the legality of this skullduggery,
- WPSX-TV3, a public television station, reprehensibly fired him.
- This is another aspect of the law-enforcement mentality which bears
- close examination.
-
- While claiming a high moral ground, as protectors of the community,
- they will rationalize a vendetta as somehow protecting some vague and
- undefined 'public good.' With the zeal of vigilantes, they
- will eschew the notion of due process for their convenience. Considering
- the law beneath them, and impatient at the rare refusal of judges and
- juries to be a rubber-stamp for police privilege, they will take
- punishment into their own hands, and use any means necessary to destroy
- the lives of those who get in their way.
-
- According to the Random House Dictionary of the English Language
- (Unabridged Edition):
-
- Police state: a nation in which the police, especially a
- secret police, suppresses any act by an individual or group
- that conflicts with governmental policy or principle.
-
- Since undisclosed members of CERT, an organization directly
- funded by Air Force Intelligence, are authorized to make anonymous
- accusations of malfeasance without disclosing their identity, they
- can be called nothing but secret police.
-
- The spooks at the CIA and NSA also hold this unusual privilege, even if
- one does not consider their 'special' operations. What can these
- organizations be called if not secret police?
-
- It can not be denied, even by those myopic enough to believe that such
- organizations are necessary, that these organizations comprise a vast
- and secret government which is not elected and not subject to legal
- restraint. Only in the most egregious cases of wrongdoing are these
- organizations even censured; and even in these cases, it is only the
- flunkies that receive even a token punishment; the principals, almost
- without exception, are exonerated and even honored. Those few
- who are too disgraced to continue work even as politicians ascend to
- the rank of elder statesmen, and write their memoirs free from
- molestation.
-
- When your job, your property and your reputation can be destroyed
- or stolen without recompense and with impunity, what can our
- nation be called but a police state? When the police are even free
- to beat you senseless without provocation, on videotape, and still
- elude justice, what can this nation be called but a police state?
-
- Such were my thoughts during the months when the investigation
- seemed dormant, as my anger began, gradually, to overcome
- my fear. This is the time that I considered trashing
- the Penn State data network, the Internet, anything I could.
- Punishment, to me, has always seemed merely a goad to future
- vengeance. However, I saw the uselessness of taking revenge on
- innocent parties for the police's actions.
-
- I contacted the ACLU, who showed a remarkable lack of interest in
- the case. As charges had not been filed, there was little they
- could do. They told me, however, to contact them in the event
- that a trial date was set.
-
- "If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you."
- This is, perhaps, the biggest lie in the litany of lies
- known as the Miranda rights. It is the court which prosecutes
- you that decides whether you can afford an attorney, and the same
- court selects that attorney.
-
- Without the formal filing of charges, you can not receive the assistance
- of a public defender. This is what I was told by the public defender's
- office. Merely being investigated apparently does not entail the right
- to counsel, regardless of the level of harassment involved in the
- investigation.
-
- We remained in intermittent contact with the police, and called
- every week or so to ask what was happening. We learned nothing new.
- The only information of any importance I did learn was at a
- party. Between hand-rolled cigarettes of a sort never sold by
- the R. J. Reynolds' Tobacco Company, I discussed my case.
-
- This might not be the sort of thing one would normally do at a party,
- but if you are busted you will find that the investigation takes a
- central role in your life. When you are not talking about it, you
- are thinking about it. When you are not thinking about it, you are
- trying the best you can not to think about it. It is a cherished belief
- of mine that anyone who survives a police investigation ought to receive
- at least an Associate's degree in Criminal Law; you will learn more about
- the law than you ever wished to know.
-
- The person on my right, when I said that Jeffery Jones was in charge
- of the case, immediately started. "He was in my high school class,"
- said the man, who sported a handlebar mustache.
-
- "What? Really? What's he like? Is he as much of an asshole in person?"
- I asked.
-
- "He was kind of a weird kid."
-
- "How? What's he done? Have you kept in touch?"
-
- "Well, all I really know about him is that he went out to be a cop in
- Austin, but he couldn't take it, had a breakdown or something, and came
- back here."
-
- "I can see that. He's a fucking psycho."
-
- I gloated over this tidbit of information, and decided that I would
- use it the next time I met the police.
-
- This was to be several weeks. Though we had given the police our work
- schedules, phone numbers at home, work and play; and informed them when
- they might be likely to locate us at any particular place, we had apparently
- underestimated the nearly limitless incompetence of Penn State's elite
- computer cops.
-
- As he was walking to work one day, Dale saw Jeffery Jones driving
- very slowly and craning his neck in all directions, apparently looking
- for someone. However, he failed to note the presence of Dale, the only
- person on the street. Dale wondered whether Jeffery had been looking for
- him.
-
- The next night at the Lab, the telephone rang. With a series of typical,
- frenzied accusations Jeffery Jones initiated the conversation. He believed
- that we had been attempting to escape or evade him in some manner. Wayne
- was on another line, and Dale and I talked from different phones.
-
- "You've been trying to avoid us, haven't you?" Jeffery shouted.
-
- "Where have you been?" asked Wayne.
-
- "We told you where we'd be. You said you'd be in touch," I said.
-
- "We haven't been able to find you," said Wayne.
-
- "Look, you have our goddamn work schedule, our address, our phone
- numbers, and where we usually are. What the hell else do you need?"
- asked Dale.
-
- "We went to your address. The guy we talked to didn't know where
- you were," said Wayne.
-
- As we discovered later that night, the police had been at our apartment,
- and had knocked on the wrong door, that of our downstairs neighbor,
- a mental patient who had been kicked out of the hospital after Reagan's
- generous revision of the mental health code. His main activity was
- shouting and threatening to kill people who weren't there, so the
- consternation of the police was not surprising.
-
- "So we weren't there. You could have called," said Dale.
-
- "I just hope you don't decide to leave the area. We're going to
- arrest you in a couple of days," said Wayne.
-
- "You've been saying that for the last three months," I said.
- "What's taking so long?"
-
- "The secretary's sick," said Jeffery.
-
- "You ought to get this secretary to a doctor. She must be
- really goddamn sick, if she can't type up an arrest warrant
- in three months," said Dale.
-
- "Hell, I'll come down and type up the damn thing myself, if
- it's too tough for the people you have down there," I offered.
-
- "No, that won't be necessary," said Wayne.
-
- "Look, when you want to arrest us, just give us a call and we'll
- come down. Don't pull some dumb cop routine like kicking in the
- door," said Dale.
-
- "Okay," Wayne said. "Your cooperation will be noted."
-
- "By the way, Jeff, I heard you couldn't hack it in Austin," I said.
-
- Silence followed.
-
- After an awkward silence, Wayne said: "We'll be in touch."
-
- We said our goodbyes, except for Jeffery, and hung up the phones.
-
- I somewhat regretted the last remark, but was still happy with its
- reception. It is probably unwise to play Scare-the-Cops, but by
- then I no longer gave a damn. He was probably dead certain that I
- had found this information, and other tidbits of information I had
- casually mentioned, in some sort of computer database. His mind
- was too limited to consider the possibility that I had met an old
- high-school chum of his and pumped him for information.
-
- By this time, our fear of the police had diminished, and both of
- us were sick to death of the whole business. We just hoped that
- whatever was to happen would happen more quickly.
-
- When the police first started threatening to arrest us within days,
- it would send a tremor down my spine. However, after three months of
- obfuscation, excuses, continued harassment of this nature, my only
- response to this threat was anger and boredom.
-
- At least, upon arrest, we would enter a domain where there were some
- rules of conduct and some certainty. The Kafkaesque uncertainty and
- arbitrarily redefined rules inherent in a police investigation were
- intolerable.
-
- After another month of delay, the police called us again,
- and we agreed to come in to be arrested at nine o'clock the
- next morning.
-
- It was possible that the police would jail us, but it seemed unlikely.
- Two prominent faculty members had strongly condemned the behavior of
- the police. The case was also politically-charged, and jailing us
- would likely have resulted in howls of outrage, and perhaps even in
- a civil or criminal suit against Penn State.
-
- Wayne told us that we would have to go to the District Magistrate
- for a preliminary hearing. Dale said that we would go, but demanded a ride
- there and back. The police complied.
-
- We were more relieved than worried. Finally, something was happening.
-
-
- XII. The Arrest
-
- On a cold and sunny morning we walked into the police station to be
- arrested. I was curious as to the fingerprinting procedure. The cops
- were to make three copies of my fingerprints, one for the local police,
- one for the state police, and one for the FBI.
-
- Jeffery was unable to fingerprint me on the first two attempts.
- When he finally succeeded in fingerprinting me, he had to do it again.
- He had incorrectly filled out the form. Finally, with help
- from Wayne, he was able to fingerprint me.
-
- Dale was more difficult. Jeffery objected to the softness of Dale's
- fingers, and said that would make it difficult. The fact that Dale's
- fingers were soft, as he is a pianist more accustomed to smooth
- ivory than plastic, would seem to exonerate him from any charge of
- computer hacking. However, such a thought never troubled the idyllic
- vacancy of Jeffery's mind. He was too busy bungling through
- the process of fingerprinting. Wayne had to help him again.
-
- There was soap and water for washing the ink from our
- fingers. However, it left the faintest trace of ink on the pads
- of my fingers, and I looked at the marks with awe, realizing that
- I had been, in a way, permanently stigmatized.
-
- However, as poorly as the soap had cleaned my fingers, I thought
- with grim amusement that Jeffery would have much more difficulty
- cleaning the ink from his clothes.
-
- Jeffery did not take the mug shots. A photographer took them.
- Therefore, it went smoothly.
-
- Finally, Wayne presented me with an arrest warrant affidavit, evidently
- written by Jeffery Jones. A paragon of incompetence, incapable of
- performing the simplest task without assistance, Jeff had written an
- eighteen-page arrest warrant affidavit which was a marvel of incoherence
- and inaccuracy. This document, with a list of corrections and emendations,
- will appear in a separate article.
-
- While reading the first five pages of this astounding document, I attempted
- to maintain an air of solemnity. However, by the sixth page, I was stifling
- giggles. By the seventh, I was chuckling out loud. By the eighth page I
- was laughing. By the ninth page I was laughing loudly, and I finished the
- rest of the document in gales of mirth. Everyone in the room stared at me
- as if I were insane. This didn't bother me. Most of my statements to the
- police resulted in this sort of blank stare. Even Dale looked as if
- he thought I had cracked, but he understood when he saw his arrest
- warrant affidavit, nearly identical to mine.
-
- I simply was unable to take seriously that I had spent months worrying
- about what kind of a case they had, when their best effort was this
- farrago of absurdities.
-
- They took us to Clifford Yorks, the District Magistrate, in separate
- cars. This time, we rode in the front seat, and two young recruits
- were our chauffeurs. Dale asked his driver if he could turn on the
- siren. The cop was not amused.
-
- The only thing which struck me about Clifford Yorks was
- that he had a remarkably large head. It appeared as if it
- had been inflated like a beach ball.
-
- The magistrate briefly examined the arrest warrant affidavits,
- nodded his vast head, and released us on our own recognizance,
- in lieu of ten thousand dollars bail. He seemed somewhat preoccupied.
- We signed the papers and left. The police offered to give
- us a ride right to our house, but we said we'd settle for being
- dropped off in town.
-
- Being over a month in arrears for rent, we did not like the idea
- of our landlord seeing us arrive in separate police cars; also,
- our address was rather notorious, and other residents would be
- greatly suspicious if they saw us with cops.
-
- An arraignment was scheduled for a date months in the future.
- The waiting game was to resume.
-
-
- XIII. Legal Counsel
-
- Having been arrested, we were at last eligible for legal counsel.
- We went to the yellow pages and started dialing. We started with
- the attorneys with colored half-page ads. Even from those advertising
- "Reasonable Rates," we received figures I will not quote for fear
- of violating obscenity statutes.
-
- Going to the quarter-page ads, then the red-lettered names, then the
- schmucks with nothing but names, we received the same sort of numbers.
- Finally talking to the _pro bono_ attorneys, we found that we were
- entitled to a reduction in rates of almost fifty per cent.
-
- This generosity brought the best price down to around three thousand
- dollars, which was three thousand dollars more than we could afford.
-
- So we contacted the public defender's office.
-
- Friends told me that a five thousand dollar attorney is worse, even,
- than a public defender; and that it takes at least twenty thousand
- to retain an attorney with capable of winning anything but the most
- open-and-shut criminal case.
-
- After a certain amount of bureaucratic runaround, we were assigned two
- attorneys. One, Deborah Lux, was the Assistant Chief Public Defender;
- the other, Dale's attorney, was Bradley Lunsford, a sharp, young
- attorney who seemed too good to be true.
-
- We discussed the case with our new attorneys, and were told that the
- best action we could take to defend ourselves was to do nothing.
-
- This is true. Anything we had attempted in our own defense, with
- the exception of contacting the complaining party, had been harmful
- to our case. Any discussions we had with the police were taped and
- examined for anything incriminating. A letter to the district
- attorney was ignored entirely.
-
- Do absolutely nothing without legal counsel. Most legal counsel will
- advise you to do nothing. Legal counsel has more leverage than you do,
- and can make binding deals with the police. You can't.
-
- We discussed possible defenses.
-
- As none of the systems into which I had intruded had any sort of warning
- against unauthorized access, this was considered a plausible defense.
-
- The almost exclusive use of 'guest' accounts was also beneficial.
-
- A more technical issue is the Best Evidence rule. We wondered whether
- a court would allow hardcopy as evidence, when the original document was
- electronic. As it happens, hardcopy is often admissible due to
- loopholes in this rule, even though hardcopy is highly susceptible to
- falsification by the police; and most electronic mail has no
- built-in authentication to prove identity.
-
- Still, without anything more damaging than electronic mail, a case
- would be very difficult to prosecute. However, with what almost
- amounted to a taped confession, the chance of a conviction
- was increased.
-
- We went over the arrest warrant affidavit, and my corrections to it,
- with a mixture of amusement and consternation.
-
- "So what do you think of this?" asked Dale.
-
- After a moment of thought, Deb Lux said: "This is gibberish."
-
- "I just had a case where a guy pumped four bullets into his brother-in-law,
- just because he didn't like him, and the arrest warrant for that was two
- pages long. One and a half, really," said Brad.
-
- "Does this help us, at all, that this arrest warrant is just demonstrably
- false, that it literally has over a hundred mistakes in it?" I asked.
-
- "Yeah, that could help," said Brad.
-
- We agreed to meet at the arraignment.
-
-
- XIV. The Stairwells of Justice
-
- The arraignment was a simple procedure, and was over in five minutes.
- Prior to our arraignment, five other people were arraigned on charges
- of varying severity, mainly such heinous crimes as smoking marijuana
- or vandalism.
-
- Dale stepped in front of the desk first. He was informed of the charges
- against him, asked if he understood them, and that was it.
-
- I stepped up, but when the judge asked me whether I understood the charges,
- I answered that I didn't, and that the charges were incomprehensible
- to a sane human being. I had hoped for some sort of response, but
- that was it for me, too.
-
- A trial date was set, once again months in advance.
-
- A week before the date arrived, it was once again postponed.
-
- During this week, we were informed that Dale's too good to be true
- attorney, Brad Lunsford, had went over to the District Attorney's
- office. He was replaced by Dave Crowley, the Chief District Attorney,
- a perpetually bitter, pock-faced older man with the demeanor and
- bearing of an angry accountant.
-
- Crowley refused to consider any of the strategies we had discussed
- at length with Brad and Deb. Dale was understandably irate at the
- sudden change, as was I, for when Deb and I were attempting to discuss
- the case he would interject rude comments.
-
- Finally, after some particularly snide remark, I told him to fuck
- off, or something similarly pleasant, and left. Dale and I tried to
- limit our dealings to Deb, and it was Deb who handled both of our
- cases to the end, for which I thank God.
-
- The day arrived.
-
- We dressed quite sharply, Dale in new wool slacks and jacket. I dressed
- in a new suit as well, and inserted a carnation in my buttonhole as
- a gesture of contempt for the proceedings.
-
- Dale looked so sharp that he was mistaken for an attorney twice. I
- did not share this distinction, but I looked sharp enough. I had
- shaved my beard a month previously after an error in trimming,
- so I looked presentable.
-
- We realized that judges base their decisions as much on your appearance
- as on what you say. We did not intend to say anything, so
- appearance was of utmost importance.
-
- We arrived at about the same time as at least thirty assorted computer
- security professionals, police, witnesses and ancillary court personnel.
- Dhamir Mannai and Richard Devon were there as well, and we exchanged
- greetings. Richard Devon was optimistic about the outcome, as was
- Dhamir Mannai. The computer security people gathered into a tight,
- paranoid knot, and Richard Devon and Dhamir Mannai stood about ten
- feet away from them, closer to us than to them. Robert Owens,
- Angela Thomas, Bryan Jensen, and Dan Ehrlich were there, among others.
- They seemed nervous and ill-at-ease in their attempt at formal dress.
- Occasionally, one or another would glare at us, or at Devon and Mannai.
- I smiled and waved.
-
- A discussion of some sort erupted among the computer security people,
- and a bailiff emerged and requested that they be quiet. The second time this
- was necessary, he simply told them to shut up, and told them to take
- their discussion to the stairwells. Dale and I had known of the noise
- policy for some time, and took all attorney-client conferences to the
- stairwells, which were filled at all times with similar conferences.
- It seemed that all the hearings and motions were just ceremonies without
- meaning; all the decisions had been made, hours before, in the stairwells
- of justice.
-
- Finally Deb Lux arrived, with a sheaf of documents, and immediately left,
- saying that she would return shortly. A little over twenty minutes later,
- she returned to announce that she had struck a deal with Eileen Tucker,
- the Assistant District Attorney.
-
- In light of the garbled nature of the police testimony, the spuriousness
- of the arrest warrant affidavit, the hostility of their main witness,
- Dhamir Mannai, and the difficulty of prosecuting a highly technical case,
- the Office of the District Attorney was understandably reluctant to
- prosecute us.
-
- I was glad not to have to deal with Eileen Tucker, a woman affectionately
- nicknamed by other court officials "The Wicked Witch of the West."
- With her pallid skin, and her face drawn tightly over her skull as
- if she had far too much plastic surgery, this seemed an adequately
- descriptive name, both as to appearance and personality.
-
- The deal was Advanced Rehabilitative Disposition, a pre-trial diversion in
- which you effectively receive probation and a fine, and charges are dismissed,
- leaving you with no criminal record. This is what first-time
- drunk drivers usually receive.
-
- It is essentially a bribe to get the cops off your back.
-
- The fines were approximately two thousand dollars apiece, with Dale
- arbitrarily receiving a fine two hundred dollars greater than mine.
-
- After a moment of thought, we decided that the fines were too large.
- We turned down the deal, and asked her if she could get anything
- better than that.
-
- After a much shorter conference she returned, announcing
- that the fines had been dropped by about a third. Still unsatisfied,
- but realizing that the proceedings, trial, jury selection, delays,
- sentencing, motions of discovery and almost limitless writs and
- affidavits and appeals would take several more months, we agreed
- to the deal. It was preferable to more hellish legal proceedings.
-
- We discussed the deal outside with Richard Devon; Dhamir Mannai had left,
- having pressing engagements both before and after his testimony had
- been scheduled. We agreed that a trial would probably have resulted
- in an eventual victory, but at what unaffordable cost? We had no
- resources or time for a prolonged legal battle, and no acceptable
- alternative to a plea-bargain.
-
-
- XV. The End? Of Course Not; There Is No End
-
- This, we assumed incorrectly, was the end. There was still a date
- for sentencing, and papers to be signed.
-
- Nevertheless, this was all a formality, and weeks distant. There
- was time to prepare for these proceedings. The hounds of spring
- were on winter's traces. Dale and I hoped to return to what was
- left of our lives, and to enjoy the summer.
-
- This hope was not to be fulfilled.
-
- For, while entering the Electronic Music Lab one fine spring night,
- Andy Ericson [*], a locally-renowned musician, was halted by the
- University Police outside the window, as he prepared to enter.
- We quickly explained that we were authorized to be present, and
- immediately presented appropriate keys, IDs and other evidence that
- we were authorized to be in the Lab.
-
- Nevertheless, more quickly than could be imagined, the cops grabbed
- Andy and slammed him against a cruiser, frisking him for
- weapons. They claimed that a person had been sighted carrying a
- firearm on campus, and that they were investigating a call.
-
- No weapons were discovered. However, a small amount of marijuana
- and a tiny pipe were found on him. Interestingly, the police log
- in the paper the following day noted the paraphernalia bust, but
- there was no mention of any person carrying a firearm on campus.
-
- Andy, a mathematician pursuing a Master's Degree, was performing
- research in a building classified Secret, and thus required a security
- clearance to enter the area where he performed his research.
-
- His supervisor immediately yanked his security clearance, and
- this greatly jeopardized his chances of completing his thesis.
-
- This is, as with my suspicions of wiretapping, an incident in which
- circumstantial evidence seems to justify my belief that the
- police were, even then, continuing surveillance on my friends and
- on me. However, as with my wiretapping suspicions, there is
- a maddening lack of substantial evidence to confirm my belief
- beyond a reasonable doubt.
-
- Still, the police continued their series of visits to the Lab, under
- one ruse or another. Jeffery Jones, one night, threatened to arrest
- Dale for being in the Electronic Music Lab, though he had been informed
- repeatedly that Dale's access was authorized by the School of Music. Dale
- turned over his keys to Police Services the following day, resenting it
- bitterly.
-
- This, however, was not to be a victory for the cops, but a crushing
- embarrassment. While their previous actions had remained at least
- within the letter of the law and of university policy, this was
- egregious and obvious harassment, and was very quickly quashed.
-
- Bob Wilkins, the supervisor of the Electronic Music Lab; Burt Fenner,
- head of the Electronic Music division; and the Dean of the College of
- Arts and Architecture immediately drafted letters to the University
- Police objecting to this illegal action; as it is the professors and
- heads of departments who authorize keys, and not the University
- Police. The keys were returned within three days.
-
- However, Jeffery was to vent his impotent rage in repeated visits to
- the Lab at late hours. On a subsequent occasion, he again threatened
- to arrest Dale, without providing any reason or justification for it.
-
- The police, Jeffery and others, always had some pretext for these visits,
- but the fact that these visits only occurred when Dale was
- present in the Lab, and that they visited no one else, seems to be
- solid circumstantial evidence that they were more than routine
- checkups.
-
- Once the authorities become interested in you, the file is never
- closed. Perhaps it will sit in a computer for ten or twenty years.
- Perhaps it will never be accessed again. However, perhaps some
- day in the distant future the police will be investigating some
- unrelated incident, and will once again note your name. You were
- in the wrong building, or talked to the wrong person. Suddenly,
- their long-dormant interest in you has reawakened. Suddenly, they
- once again want you for questioning. Suddenly, once again, they
- pull your life out from under you.
-
- This is the way democracies die, not by revolution or coups d'etat,
- not by the flowing of blood in the streets like water, as historical
- novelists so quaintly write. Democracies die by innumerable papercuts.
- Democracies die by the petty actions of petty bureaucrats who, like
- mosquitoes, each drain their little drop of life's blood until none
- is left.
-
-
- XVI. Lightning Always Strikes the Same Place Twice
-
- One day, Dale received in the mail a subpoena, which informed him that
- his testimony was required in the upcoming trial of Ron Gere, who
- had moved to Florida. The cops had charged him with criminal
- conspiracy in the creation of the Huang account at the Engineering
- Computer Lab.
-
- Now, not only was I guilty of being used as a weapon against a
- friend, but also guilty of this further complication, that the
- police were to use a friend of mine as a weapon against yet
- another friend.
-
- It is interesting to note the manner in which the police use
- betrayal, deceit and infamous methods to prosecute crime.
-
- It is especially interesting to note the increased use of
- such methods in the prosecution of crimes with no apparent victim.
- Indeed, in this specific case, the only victim with a demonstrable
- loss testified against the police and for the accused.
-
- Dale resolved to plead the Fifth to any question regarding Ron,
- and to risk contempt of court by doing so, rather than be used
- in this manner.
-
- This was not necessary. As it happened, Ron was to drive well over
- two thousand miles simply to sign a paper and receive ARD. The three
- of us commiserated, and then Ron was on his way back to Florida.
-
-
- XVII. Sentencing
-
- Dale and I reported to the appropriate courtroom for sentencing. In
- the hall, a young man, shackled and restrained by two police officers,
- was yelling: "I'm eighteen, and I'm having a very bad day!" The cops
- didn't bat an eye as they dragged him to the adjoining prison.
-
- We sat.
-
- The presiding judge, the Hon. David C. Grine, surveyed with evident
- disdain a room full of criminals like us. Deborah Lux was there, once
- again serving as counsel. David Crowley was mercifully absent.
-
- The judge briefly examined each case before him. For each case, he announced
- the amount of the fine, the time of probation, and banged his gavel.
- Immediately before he arrived at our case, he looked at a man directly to
- our left. Instead of delivering the usual ARD sentence, he flashed a
- sadistic grin and said: "Two years jail." Dealing marijuana was the crime.
- The man's attorney objected. The judge said: "Okay, two years, one
- suspended." The attorney, another flunky from the public defender's
- office, sat down again. Two cops immediately dragged the man from the
- courtroom to take him to jail.
-
- I noted that practically everyone in the room was poor,
- and those with whom I spoke were all uneducated. DUI was the
- most common offense.
-
- Judge Grine came to our case, announced the expected sentence,
- and we reported upstairs to be assigned probation officers. I was
- disgusted with myself for having agreed to this arrangement, and
- perhaps this was why I was surly with the probation officer, Thomas
- Harmon. This earned me a visit to a court-appointed psychiatrist,
- to determine if I were mentally disturbed or on drugs.
-
- That I was neither was satisfied by a single interview, and no
- drug-testing was necessary; for which I am grateful, for I would
- have refused any such testing. Exercising this Fifth Amendment-
- guaranteed right is, of course, in this day considered to be
- an admission of guilt. The slow destruction of this right began
- with the government policy of "implied consent," by which one
- signs over one's Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination
- by having a driver's license, allowing a police officer to pull
- you over and test your breath for any reason or for no reason
- at all.
-
- I later apologized to Thomas Harmon for my rudeness, as he had
- done me no disservice; indeed, a probation officer is, at least,
- in the business of keeping people out of jail instead of putting
- them there; and his behavior was less objectionable than that of
- any other police officer involved in my case.
-
- Very shortly thereafter, realizing that I knew a large number
- of the local police on a first-name basis, I left the area, with the
- stated destination of Indiana. I spent the next two years travelling,
- with such waypoints as New Orleans, Denver, Seattle and Casper, Wyoming;
- and did not touch a computer for three years, almost having a horror
- of them.
-
- I did not pay my fine in the monthly installments the court demanded.
- I ignored virtually every provision of my probation. I did not remain
- in touch with my probation officer, almost determined that my absence
- should be noticed. I did a lot of drugs, determined to obliterate all
- memory of my previous life. In Seattle, heroin was a drug of choice,
- so I did that for a while.
-
- Finally, I arrived at my stated destination, Indiana, with only about
- three months remaining in my probation, and none of my fines paid. Dale,
- without my knowledge, called my parents and convinced them to pay the
- fine.
-
- It took me a few days of thought to decide whether or not to accept
- their generous offer; I had not thought of asking them to pay the fine,
- sure that they would not. Perhaps I had done them a disservice in so
- assuming, but now I had to decide whether to accept their help.
-
- If my fines were not paid, my ARD would be revoked, and a new trial
- date would be set. I was half determined to return and fight this
- case, still ashamed of having agreed to such a deal under duress.
- However, after discussing it at exhaustive length with everyone I
- knew, I came to the conclusion that to do so would be foolish and quixotic.
- Hell, I thought, Thoreau did the same thing in a similar circumstance;
- why shouldn't I?
-
- I accepted my parents' offer. Three months later, I received a letter in
- the mail announcing that the case had been dismissed and my records
- expunged, with an annotation to the effect that records would be
- retained only to determine eligibility for any future ARD. I believe
- this to the same degree in which I believe that the NSA never
- performs surveillance on civilians. I have my doubts that the FBI
- eliminated all mention of me from their files. I shall decide after
- I file a Freedom of Information Act request and receive a reply.
-
- I now have a legitimate Internet account and due to my experiences
- with weak encryption am a committed cypherpunk and Clipper Chip
- proposal opponent.
-
- What is the moral to this story?
-
- Even now, when I have had several years to gain distance and perspective,
- there does not seem to be a clear moral; only several pragmatic
- lessons.
-
- I became enamored of my own brilliance, and arrogantly sure that
- my intelligence was invulnerability. I assumed my own immortality,
- and took a fall. This was not due to the intelligence of my
- adversaries, for the stupidity of the police was marvellous to
- behold. It was due to my own belief that I was somehow infallible.
-
- Good intentions are only as good as the precautions taken to ensure
- their effectiveness.
-
- There is always a Public Enemy Number One. As the public's fickle
- attention strays from the perceived menace of drug use, it will latch
- on to whatever new demon first appears on television. With the
- growing prevalence of hatchet jobs on hackers in the public media,
- it appears that hackers are to be the new witches.
-
- It is advisable, then, that we avoid behavior which would tend to
- confirm the stereotypes. For every Emmanuel Goldstein or R. U.
- Sirius in the public eye, there are a dozen Mitnicks and Hesses;
- and, alas, it is the Mitnicks and Hesses who gain the most attention.
- Those who work for the betterment of society are much less interesting
- to the media than malicious vandals or spies.
-
- In addition, it is best to avoid even the appearance of dishonesty
- in hacking, eschewing all personal gain.
-
- Phreaking or hacking for personal gain at the expense of others is
- entirely unacceptable. Possibly bankrupting a small company through
- excessive telephone fraud is not only morally repugnant, but also puts
- money into the coffers of the monopolistic phone companies that we despise.
-
- The goal of hacking is, and always has been, the desire for full
- disclosure of that information which is unethically and illegally
- hidden by governments and corporations; add to that a dash of
- healthy curiosity and a hint of rage, and you have a solvent capable
- of dissolving the thickest veils of secrecy. If destructive means
- are necessary, by all means use them; but be sure that you are not
- acting from hatred, but from love.
-
- The desire to destroy is understandable, and I sympathize with it;
- anyone who can not think of a dozen government bodies which would be
- significantly improved by their destruction is probably too
- dumb to hack in the first place. However, if that destruction merely
- leads to disproportionate government reprisals, then it is not only
- inappropriate but counterproductive.
-
- The secrecy and hoarding of information so common in the hacker
- community mirrors, in many respects, the secrecy and hoarding of
- information by the very government we resist. The desired result
- is full disclosure. Thus, the immediate, anonymous broadband
- distribution of material substantiating government and corporate
- wrongdoing is a mandate.
-
- Instead of merely collecting information and distributing it
- privately for personal amusement, it must be sent to newspapers,
- television, electronic media, and any other means of communication
- to ensure both that this information can not be immediately
- suppressed by the confiscation of a few bulletin board systems
- and that our true motives may be discerned from our public and
- visible actions.
-
- Our actions are not, in the wake of Operation Sun-Devil and the
- Clipper Chip proposal, entirely free. The government has declared
- war on numerous subsections of its own population, and thus has
- defined the terms of the conflict. The War on Drugs is a notable
- example, and we must ask what sort of a government declares war
- on its own citizens, and act accordingly.
-
- Those of us who stand for liberty must act while we still can.
-
- It is later than we think.
-
-
- "In Germany they first came for the Communists and
- I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.
- Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up
- because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the
- trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I
- wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the
- Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a
- Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that
- time no one was left to speak up." Martin Niemoeller
-
- "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain
- a litle temporary safety deserver neither
- liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
-
- ---------
- APPENDIX A
-
- [From cert-clippings]
-
- Date: Sat, 10 Mar 90 00:22:22 GMT
- From: thomas@shire.cs.psu.edu (Angela Marie Thomas)
- Subject: PSU Hackers thwarted
-
- The Daily Collegian Wednesday, 21 Feb 1990
-
- Unlawful computer use leads to arrests
- ALEX H. LIEBER, Collegian Staff Writer
-
- Two men face charges of unlawful computer use, theft of services in a
- preliminary hearing scheduled for this morning at the Centre County Court of
- Common Pleas in Bellefonte. Dale Garrison, 111 S. Smith St., and Robert W.
- Clark, 201 Twin Lake Drive, Gettysburg, were arrested Friday in connection with
- illegal use of the University computer system, according to court records.
- Garrison, 36, is charged with the theft of service, unlawful computer use
- and criminal conspiracy. Clark, 20, is charged with multiple counts of
- unlawful computer use and theft of service. [...]
-
- Clark, who faces the more serious felony charges, allegedly used two computer
- accounts without authorization from the Center of Academic Computing or the
- Computer Science Department and, while creating two files, erased a file from
- the system. [...] When interviewed by University Police Services, Clark
- stated in the police report that the file deleted contained lists of various
- groups under the name of "ETZGREEK." Clark said the erasure was accidental,
- resulting from an override in the file when he tried to copy it over onto a
- blank file. According to records, Clark is accused of running up more than
- $1000 in his use of the computer account. Garrison is accused of running up
- more than $800 of computer time.
-
- Police began to investigate allegations of illegal computer use in November
- when Joe Lambert, head of the university's computer department, told police a
- group of people was accessing University computer accounts and then using those
- accounts to gain access to other computer systems. Among the systems accessed
- was Internet, a series of computers hooked to computer systems in industry,
- education and the military, according to records.
-
- The alleged illegal use of the accounts was originally investigated by a
- Computer Emergency Response Team at Carnegie-Mellon University, which assists
- other worldwide computer systems in investigating improper computer use.
-
- Matt Crawford, technical contact in the University of Chicago computer
- department discovered someone had been using a computer account from Penn State
- to access the University of Chicago computer system.
-
-
-
-
-
-