| #### PHRACK PRESENTS ISSUE 17 #### | |
| ^*^*^*^ Phrack World News, Part 2 ^*^*^*^ | |
| **** File 11 of 12 **** | |
| "Illegal Hacker Crackdown" | |
| from the California Computer News - October 1987 | |
| Article by Al Simmons - CCN Editor | |
| Hackers beware! | |
| Phone security authorities, the local police, and the Secret Service have been | |
| closing down on illegal hacking - electronic thievery - that is costing the | |
| long-distance communications companies and their customers millions of dollars | |
| annually. In the U.S., the loss tally on computer fraud, of all kinds, is now | |
| running between $3 billion and $5 a year, according to government sources. | |
| "San Francisco D.A. Gets First Adult Conviction for Hacking" | |
| (After about 18 years, it's a about time!) | |
| San Francisco, District Attorney Arlo Smith recently announced the first | |
| criminal conviction in San Francisco Superior Court involving an adult | |
| computer hacker. | |
| In a report released August 31, the San Francisco District Attorney's office | |
| named defendant Steve Cseh, 25, of San Francisco as having pled guilty earlier | |
| that month to a felony of "obtaining telephone services with fraudulent | |
| intent" (phreaking) by means of a computer. | |
| Cseh was sentenced by Superior Court Judge Laurence Kay to three years | |
| probation and ordered to preform 120 hours of community service. | |
| Judge Kay reduced the offense to a misdemeanor in light of Cseh's making full | |
| restitution to U.S. Sprint - the victim phone company. | |
| At the insistence of the prosecuting attorney, however, the Court ordered Cseh | |
| to turn his computer and modem over to U.S. Sprint to help defray the phone | |
| company's costs in detecting the defendant's thefts. (That's like big money | |
| there!) | |
| A team of investigators from U.S. Sprint and Pac Tel (the gestapo) worked for | |
| weeks earlier this year to detect the hacking activity and trace it to Cseh's | |
| phone line, D.A. Arlo Smith said. | |
| The case centered around the use of a computer and its software to illegally | |
| acquire a number of their registered users to make long-distance calls. | |
| Cseh's calls were monitored for a three-week period last March. After tracing | |
| the activity to Cseh's phone line, phone company security people (gestapo | |
| stormtroopers) were able to obtain legal authority, under a federal phone | |
| communications statute, to monitor the origin and duration of the illegal | |
| calls. | |
| Subsequently, the investigators along with Inspector George Walsh of the San | |
| Francisco Police Dept. Fraud Detail obtained a search warrant of Cseh's | |
| residence. Computer equipment, a software dialing program, and notebooks | |
| filled with codes and phone numbers were among the evidence seized, according | |
| to Asst. D.A. Jerry Coleman who prosecuted the case. | |
| U.S Sprint had initially reported more than $300,000 in losses from the use of | |
| their codes during the past two years; however, the investigation efforts | |
| could only prove specific losses of a lesser amount traceable to Cseh during | |
| the three-week monitoring period. | |
| "It is probable that other computer users had access to the hacked Sprint | |
| codes throughout the country due to dissemination on illegal computer bulletin | |
| boards," added Coleman (When where BBS's made illegal Mr. Coleman?) | |
| "Sacramento Investigators Breakup Tahoe Electronic Thefts" | |
| Meanwhile, at South Shore Lake Tahoe, Secret Service and phone company | |
| investigators arrested Thomas Gould Alvord, closing down an electronic theft | |
| ring estimated to have rung up more than $2 million in unauthorized calls. | |
| A Sacramento Bee story, filed by the Bee staff writers Ted Bell and Jim Lewis, | |
| reported that Alvord, 37, was arrested September 9, on five felony counts of | |
| computer hacking of long-distance access codes to five private telephone | |
| companies. | |
| Alvord is said to have used an automatic dialer, with computer programmed | |
| dialing formulas, enabling him to find long-distance credit card numbers used | |
| by clients of private telephone companies, according to an affidavit filed in | |
| Sacramento's District Court. | |
| The affidavit, filed by William S. Granger, a special agent of the Secret | |
| Service, identified Paula Hayes, an investigator for Tel-America of Salt Lake | |
| City, as the undercover agent who finally brought an end to Alvord's South | |
| Shore Electronic Co. illegal hacking operation. Hayes worked undercover to | |
| purchase access codes from Alvord. | |
| Agent Garanger's affidavit lists U.S. Sprint losses at $340,000 but Sprint | |
| spokesman Jenay Cottrell said that figure "could grow considerably," according | |
| to the Bee report. | |
| One stock brokerage firm, is reported to have seen its monthly Pacific Bell | |
| telephone bill climb steadily from $3,000 in April to $72,000 in August. The | |
| long-distance access codes of the firm were among those traced to Alvord's | |
| telephones, according to investigators the Bee said. | |
| Alvord was reportedly hacking access codes from Sprint, Pacific Bell, and | |
| other companies and was selling them to truck drivers for $60 a month. Alvord | |
| charged companies making overseas calls and larger businesses between $120 and | |
| $300 a month for the long-distance services of his South Shore Electronics Co. | |
| >From The $muggler | |