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- HACKERS' OFF HOOK, PROPERTY RETURNED
- By Danna Dykstra Coy
-
- This article appeared in the Telegram-Tribune Newspaper, San Luis Obispo, CA.
- April 12, 1991. Permission to electronically reproduce this article was given
- by the newspaper's senior editor.
-
- *****
-
- Two San Luis Obispo men suspected of computer tampering will not be charged
- with any crime. They will get back the computer equipment that was seized
- from their homes, according to Stephen Brown, a deputy district attorney who
- handled the case. "It appears to have been a case of inadvertent access to a
- modem with no criminal intent," said Brown. San Luis Obispo police were
- waiting on Brown's response to decide whether to pursue an investigation that
- started last month. They said they would drop the matter if Brown didn't file
- a case.
-
- The officer heading the case, Gary Nemeth, admitted police were learning as
- they went along because they rarely deal with computer crimes. Brown said he
- dosen't believe police overreacted in their investigation. "They had a
- legitimate concern."
-
- In early March two dermatologists called police when the computer system
- containing patient billing records in their San Luis Obispo office kept
- shutting down. They paid a computer technician about $1,500 to re-program
- their modem, a device that allows computers to communicate through the
- telephone lines. The technician told the doctors it appeared someone was
- trying to tap into their system. The computer's security system caused the
- shutdown after several attempts to gain access failed.
-
- Police ordered a 10-day phone tap on the modem's line and, after obtaining
- search warrants, searched four residences where calls were made to the skin
- doctors' modem at least three times. One suspect, Ron Hopson, said last week
- his calls were legitimate and claimed police overreacted when they seized his
- computer, telephone, and computer manuals. Hopson could not reached Thursday
- for comment.
-
- Brown's investigation revealed Hopson, like the other suspects, was trying to
- log-on to a computerized "bulletin-board" that incorrectly gave the doctors'
- number as the key to a system called "Cygnus XI". Cygnus XI enabled computer
- users to electronically send messages to one another. Brown said while this
- may not be the county's first computer crime, it was the first time the
- District Attorney's Office authorized search warrants in a case of suspected
- computer fraud using telephone lines. Police will not be returning several
- illegally obtained copies of software also seized during the raids, he said.
-
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