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- COMPUTER CASE TAKES A TWIST
- By Danna Dykstra Coy
-
- This article appeared in the Telegram-Tribune Newspaper, San Luis Obispo, CA.
- March 29, 1991. Permission to electronically reproduce this article was given
- by the newspaper's senior editor.
-
- *****
-
- A suspected computer hacker says San Luis Obispo police overreacted when they
- broke into his house and confiscated thousands of dollars of equipment. "I
- feel violated and I'm angry" said 34-year-old engineer Ron Hopson. All of
- Hopson's computer equipment was seized last week by police who believed he may
- have illegally tried to "hack" his way into an office computer belonging to two
- San Luis Obispo dermatologists. Police also confiscated equipment belonging
- to three others.
-
- "If police had known more about what they were doing, I don't think it would
- have gone this far," Hopson said. "They've treated me like a criminal, and I
- was never aware I was doing anything wrong. It's like a nightmare." Hopson,
- who has not been arrested in the case, was at work last week when a neighbor
- called to tell him there were three patrol cars and two detective cars at his
- house. Police broke into the locked front door of his residence, said Officer
- Gary Nemeth, and broke down a locked door to his study where he keeps his
- computer. "They took my stuff, they rummaged through my house, and all the
- time I was trying to figure out what I did, what this was about. I didn't have
- any idea."
-
- A police phone tap showed three calls were made from Hopson's residence this
- month to a computer at an office shared by doctors James Longabaugh and Jeffery
- Herten. The doctors told police they suspected somebody was trying to access
- the computer in their office at 15 Santa Rosa St. Their system, which contains
- patient records and billing information, kept shutting down. The doctors were
- unable to access their patients' records, said Nemeth. They had to pay a
- computer technician at least $1,500 to re-program their modem, a device that
- allows computers to communicate through telephone lines.
-
- Hopson said there is an easy explanation for the foul-up. He said he was
- trying to log-on to a public bulletin board that incorrectly gave the doctors
- number as the key to a system called "Cygnus XI". Cygnus XI enabled people to
- send electronic messages to one another, but the Cygnus XI system was
- apparently outdated. The person who started it up moved from the San Luis
- Obispo area last year, and the phone company gave the dermatologists his former
- number, according to Officer Nemeth.
-
- Hopson said he learned about Cygnus XI through a local computer club, the SLO-
- BYTES User Group. "Any of the group's 250 members could have been trying to tap
- into the same system", said Robert Ward, SLO-BYTES club secretary and computer
- technician at Cal Poly. In addition, he suspects members gave the phone number
- to fellow computer buffs and could have been passed around the world through
- the computer Bulletin-Board system. "I myself might have tried to access it
- three or four times if I was a new user," he said. "I'd say if somebody tried
- 50 times, fine, they should be checked out, but not just for trying a couple of
- times."
-
- Police said some 200 calls were made to the doctors modem during the 10 days
- the phone was tapped. "They say, therefore, its obvious somebody is trying to
- make a game of trying to crack the computer code", said Hopson. "The only
- thing obvious to me is a lot of people have that published number. Nobody's
- trying to crack a code to gain illegal access to a system. I only tried it
- three times and gave up, figuring the phone was no longer in service."
-
- Hopson said he tried to explain the situation to the police. "But they took me
- to an interrogation room and said I was lying. They treated me like a big-time
- criminal, and now they won't give me back my stuff." Hopson admitted he owned
- several illegally obtained copies of software confiscated by police. "But so
- does everybody," he said, "and the police have ever right to keep them, but I
- want the rest of my stuff."
-
- Nemeth, whose training is in police work and not computer crimes, said this is
- the first such case for the department and he learning as he goes along. He
- said the matter has been turned over to the District Attorney's Office, which
- will decide whether to bring charges against Hopson and one other suspect.
-
- The seized belongings could be sold to pay restitution to the doctors who paid
- to re-program their system. Nemeth said the police are waiting for a printout
- to show how many times the suspects tried to gain access to the doctors' modem.
- "You can try to gain access as many times as you want on one phone call. The
- fact a suspect only called three times doesn't mean he only tried to gain
- access three times."
-
- Nemeth said he is aware of the bulletin board theory. "The problem is we
- believe somebody out there intentionally got into the doctors' system and shut
- it down so nobody could gain access, based on evidence from the doctors'
- computer technician," said Nemeth. "I don't think we have that person, because
- the guy would need a very sophisticated system to shut somebody else's system
- down." At the same time, he said, Hopson and the other suspects should have
- known to give up after the first failed attempt. "The laws are funny. You
- don't have to prove malicious intent when you're talking about computer
- tampering. The first attempt you might say was an honest mistake. More than
- once, you have to wonder."
-
- Police this week filled reports with the District Attorney's Office regarding
- their investigation of Hopson and another San Luis Obispo man suspected of
- computer tampering. Police are waiting for Stephen Brown, a deputy district
- attorney, to decide whether there is enough evidence against the two to take
- court action. If so, Nemeth said he will file reports involving two other
- suspects, both computer science majors from Cal Poly. All computers,
- telephones, computer instruction manuals, and program disks were seized from
- three houses in police searches last week. Hundreds of disks containing about
- $5,000 worth of illegally obtained software were also taken from the suspects'
- residences.
-
- Police and the District Attorney's Office are not naming the suspects because
- the case is still under investigation. However, police confirmed Hopson was
- one of the suspects in the case after he called the Telegram-Tribune to give
- his side of the story.
-
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