E-MAIL-TAP NETS CRIMINALS The first-ever court-approved wiretap of an e-mail account has resulted in the arrest of three people charged with running a sophisticated cellular-fraud ring. The alleged mastermind, a German electrical engineer, advertised his illicit wares on CompuServe, where they caught the attention of an engineer at AT&T's wireless unit. The Secret Service and the Drug Enforcement Agency then got into the act and obtained the Justice Dept.'s permission to intercept e-mail messages between the alleged perpetrator and his accomplices. "This case represents the challenges in the future if we can't get ahead of the curve in technology," says a U.S. attorney, whose office is prosecuting the case. (Wall Street Journal 2 Jan 96 p16) -- ==================Douglas Elznic=================== delznic@storm.net http://www.vcomm.net/~delznic/ (315)682-5489 (315)682-1647 4877 Firethorn Circle Manlius, NY 13104 "Challenge the system, question the rules." =================================================== PGP key available: http://www.vcomm.net/~delznic/pgpkey.asc PGP Fingerprint: 68 6F 89 F6 F0 58 AE 22 14 8A 31 2A E5 5C FD A5 ===================================================
On Fri, 05 Jan 1996 23:00:18 -0500, "Douglas F. Elznic" <delznic@storm.net> said: DFE> E-MAIL-TAP NETS CRIMINALS The first-ever court-approved wiretap DFE> of an e-mail account has resulted in the arrest of three people DFE> charged with running a sophisticated cellular-fraud ring. The DFE> alleged mastermind, a German electrical engineer, advertised his DFE> illicit wares on CompuServe, where they caught the attention of DFE> an engineer at AT&T's wireless unit. The Secret Service and the DFE> Drug Enforcement Agency then got into the act and obtained the DFE> Justice Dept.'s permission to intercept e-mail messages between DFE> the alleged perpetrator and his accomplices. "This case DFE> represents the challenges in the future if we can't get ahead of DFE> the curve in technology," says a U.S. attorney, whose office is DFE> prosecuting the case. (Wall Street Journal 2 Jan 96 p16) -- Well, I can't exactly say I feel sorry for the guys, even if cellular companies are ripping us off. Anyone who commits crimes while using email without encryption are idiots. --Michael
participants (2)
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Douglas F. Elznic -
Michael S. Fischer