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355 lines
14 KiB
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355 lines
14 KiB
Text
==Phrack Magazine==
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Volume Four, Issue Forty-Four, File 16 of 27
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****************************************************************************
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An Interview With Agent Steal
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By Mike Bowen, Agenta Aka Agent 005
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Please note that all of the information in this interview is
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documented in F.B.I. files and can be verified.
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______________________________________________________________________
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MB: Well I guess the first question is the biggest one. Is it true that
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you are an F.B.I. informant?
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AS: Yes.
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MB: Why?
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AS: First of all I didn't have that much of a choice. If I didn't
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cooperate with The Bureau, I could have been charged with possession
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of classified government material. That carries a penalty of over
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10 years. There is not a lot of people that I would go to jail that
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long for. I was able to keep my two closest friends out of trouble.
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That was part of my deal. It was already too late for Kevin Poulson
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and Ronald Austin.
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MB: Yeah, I think that most hackers would have done the same as you.
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AS: Most hackers would have sold out their mother.
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laughter
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MB: How come you never busted me?
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AS: Well I certainly had the opportunity to. You probably remember that
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I was calling you about a year ago and poking you for information.
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I just didn't consider you to be a dangerous or malicious hacker.
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MB: Thanks, I guess.
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AS: Just make your check out to....
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laughter
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MB: As everyone should know, Kevin Poulson "Dark Dante" was your partner.
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That was what you referred to in your BBS posts as The Inner Circle
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1990. Poulson was featured on TV's' Unsolved mysteries as a wanted
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fugitive hacker. The United States Attorney called him, "The Hannibal
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Lecter of computer crime".
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AS: I would not compare him to Lecter, I would say he is more of a
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G. Gordon Liddy.
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laughter
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MB: Regardless, Kevin is now in jail awaiting trial in San Francisco. He
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has been there for two years and when he is done, there are more
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charges awaiting him in Los Angeles. He may spend up to 15 years
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in prison. How much time do you think that you will do?
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AS: The six months I did in Texas while I was negotiating my plea agreement
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will probably be it.
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MB: How many people did you have to bust to get out of that one?
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AS: I'm not at liberty to say
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MB: I see. So are you still involved with the F.B.I.?
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AS: I believe that my cover is pretty much blown at this time so my
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usefulness is limited. I would say that I'm done. However, I have
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received several other offers to work with other computer security
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related organizations. So watch your asses kiddies, it's easy to
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change my handle!
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MB: Why do you think you are getting these offers? You are a convicted felon.
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AS: I guess I have an honest face, heh, and the work I did for the
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bureau was very good. I think I was cut out to be in the investigative
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business.
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MB: Well, you have been working for private investigators for quite some time.
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AS: Yes, I handled all of their computer information searches in addition to
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phone tapping, break ins, phone tap and bug detection.
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MB: Was that profitable?
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AS: Well, in addition to all of those radio station contests we were
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winning, I was doing OK. Driving a Porsche and living in Beverly
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Hills wasn't to bad.
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MB: I guess all good things come to an end.
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AS: I will always manage some how, I'm a survivor.
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MB: There was another partner involved with you. Wasn't his name Ron Austin?
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AS: Yes, he got busted too.
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MB: How much trouble is he in?
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AS: He is going to testify against Poulson also, so he'll probably only get
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a year or two.
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MB: Are you two still friends?
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AS: Very much so. He understood the situation I was in. I still talk to him
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frequently.
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MB: What is he up to these days?
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AS: He told me he was going to find a cause and become the first computer
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hacker turned international terrorist.
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laughter
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MB: I wouldn't want to be his enemy! Speaking of enemies, what do you think
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Poulson will do to all the people who testified against him when he gets
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out?
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AS: Well he is going to be busy. Everyone who he has ever known has turned
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against him.
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MB: Well if he wasn't such a sneaky jerk maybe someone would like him.
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AS: He brought it on himself.
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MB: Do you expect any retaliation from the hacker community?
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AS: There will probably be a few narrow minds out there. However, I have
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been very careful to conceal my true identity. People may know my real
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name if they read the papers, but that won't get them far. I find
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people for a living, I don't think it will be hard to use what I know
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to keep a low profile. Besides, what is a hacker going to do, turn off
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my phone? Regardless, If some one fucks with me, I'll just have to fuck
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back. I have a lot of friends and resources now.
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MB: What was it like working with the F.B.I.?
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AS: Very interesting and educational. I have learned a lot about how the
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bureau works. Probably too much. Obviously I can't say very much.
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However, I can say that my involvement was extensive. There was a lot
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of money and resources used. In addition, they paid me well.
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MB: Would you say it was fun?
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AS: Most of the time. They actually flew me to Summer Con in St. Louis.
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I would say the bureau had that conference pretty well covered.
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Erik Bloodaxe was there too. It was pretty funny. I think we both knew
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that each other was working for the bureau. One of the agents I worked
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with let it slip out. We were sitting across from each other at the
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conference, kind of smirking at each other. And the balls Erik had!
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He video taped the whole thing! It was classic.
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MB: What was the F.B.I. trying to accomplish?
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AS: I believe they were trying to send a message that high level computer
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hacking is something that is very serious. In Poulson's' case as you are
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aware, we got into some really heavy shit. So heavy in fact that I had
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to sign an agreement that I would never disclose any of the top secret
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information that I had seen.
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MB: That's pretty wild. The article about Poulson, Austin and you in
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The Los Angeles Times Sunday Magazine was really interesting. For
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those who want to read it the date was September 12, 1993.
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AS: I was amazed how deep that reporter was able to go. He really hit the
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nail on the head. Personally I think he wrote too much. He wrote that
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we were able to get a list of every federal wire tap in California!
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MB: Really?
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laughter
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AS: Like I said, I can neither confirm or deny that statement. There is
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still a lot of information regarding our activities that has not been
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published. Between the three of us, we were into a bunch of shit. One
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of these days, it will all be out.
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MB: The reporter also said you would take control of phone lines with
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a telephone company computer. Then you would seize radio station lines
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and win contests.
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AS: Now that we can talk about. We won tens of thousands of dollars, trips
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to Hawaii and a few Porsches. The government took both of my Porsches
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away from me.
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MB: I didn't realize that you had two.
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AS: Yeah, a friend of mine was selling his. So I had him report it stolen
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and collect the insurance. I gave him a $1000 and it was mine. I
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loved that car.
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MB: I see that was the interstate transportation of a stolen automobile
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charge that was filed in Texas?
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AS: Yeah , I changed the VIN numbers and everything. It was really clean.
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However, when I got raided they went over everything with a fine tooth
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comb. There were so many agencies involved. The F.B.I., The Secret
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Service , SW Bell Security, Pacific Bell Security, Dallas Sheriff,
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L.A.P.D. Computer Crime Unit, The United States Postal Inspector,
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Telenet and Tymnet Security and eventually The Department of Motor
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Vehicles Security Unit. What a mess, everyone wanted a piece of
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the action. But you know who always gets their man.
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MB: The Bureau.
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AS: Yep, pissed a few people off too.
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MB: Where did you get the name Agent Steal?
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AS: About ten years ago, I was under investigation by The Secret Service
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for computer hacking. The case agent was Special Agent Steele. That
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is when I became a fugitive. I left town, dropped contact with my
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friends, and changed my name. I moved to California.
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MB: What are some of your favorite hacks?
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AS: Probably the Telenet tap I put up.
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MB: You mean the private dial up tap that you had told me about?
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AS: Yeah, I placed the order in COSMOS for a bridge lifter on the first
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line in hunt of my local Telenet dial up and a 1FR to appear in an
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office building a half mile from the LA Telenet dial up.
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MB: That was great. That device you built was cool. All you had to do was
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dial up the number, connect with your modem and you could sit there
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and watch people type in their passwords all day long.
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AS: I must have snagged over 500 accounts on that thing.
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MB: That's where you got your DMV account wasn't it?
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AS: Yes. I made a small fortune reselling the information to P.I.s'
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MB: What was it you told me about tapping Heidi Fliess?
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AS: Yeah. I tapped the phone of one of her working girls. It was for this
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rich guy who would hire hookers and then get involved with them. He
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loved hookers. He used to keep tabs on this one.
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MB: What were the conversations like.
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AS: I rarely would listen to the tapes I made. I have a life, thank you.
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Besides, I have found that about 99.9% of all phone conversations
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are really boring.
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MB: Have you listened to many?
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AS: Thousands, from cellular to cordless to inter office T-carrier lines
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to long distance microwave. I guess I am a phone tap expert. Poulson
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and I would break into C.O.s on a regular basis. We had our own keys
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and I.D. badges. We came and went as we pleased. I would sometimes
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play around with the long distance trunks. That was always interesting.
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With a T-carrier test set you could scan through all of the channels
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and hear dozens of phone calls with the flick of a switch.
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MB: What is the most powerful computer that you had access to.
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AS: Good question. There really isn't one computer system out there that
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is "all" powerful, with the exception of maybe some defense
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computers. I made a point of staying away from those. However, if
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I had to pick just one computer to have access to I would say it
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was XXXXXXX. That was the Pacific Bell system that allowed us to
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drop in and monitor and control phone lines from home with the use
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of a computer system. Second would have to be DMV or COSMOS.
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Yes COSMOS. I thought that being able to place my own orders was
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important, not to mention more reliable than the business office.
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MB: Cheaper too.
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laughter
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AS: I wish I had all the money I have saved on phone bills!
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MB: Those days are gone.
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AS: At least the days of doing that safely. People tend to get pessimistic
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about hacking. I have heard some say that the good old days of boxing
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and such are gone. I disagree, we just have to adapt. As sure as
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technology advances so will hacking. There will always be new "hacks".
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It's up to the real hackers to find them. Learn from the past and move
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on or get busted and quit.
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MB: What is up with Kevin Mitnick?
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AS: I had never met him before I was busted. When I went to work for the
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bureau I contacted him. He was still up to his old tricks so we opened
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a case on him and Roscoe. It's a long story but they wound up getting
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busted again. Mitnick got tipped off right before they were going to
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pick him up. So he's on the run again. Roscoe wasn't so lucky. This
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will be Mitnick's fifth time to get busted. What a loser. Everyone
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thinks he is some great hacker. I out smarted him and busted him.
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Poulson blows him away as well.
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MB: Do you feel bad about working undercover to arrest hackers?
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AS: Not really. We all know the risks. For me it was just a job. And an
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interesting one at that. I wasn't out there just busting anyone. We
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were looking for the hard core malicious hackers. I passed up a lot
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of people in the course of the investigation. They should know who
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they are by now. The ones that got taken down deserved it. It will
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all be in the papers some day.
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MB: Did you deserve what you got.
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AS: Yeah, I was getting pretty carried away there for a while. I invaded a
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lot of peoples privacy. Phones taps, credit reports, breaking into
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Pacific Bell offices etc.
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MB: Didn't you break into PacBells' security department?
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AS: Yes, Poulson and I broke into the high rise downtown. We wanted to
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find out how far their investigation of us had gone.
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MB: Did you find what you wanted?
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AS: Yeah, DNR print outs, notes and photos! We also found a lot of
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information regarding other investigations and how they do wire taps.
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MB: Very dangerous in the wrong hands.
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AS: We are the wrong hands.
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laughter
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MB: Oh yeah. How did you get caught?
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AS: Well as you know I moved to Texas after that high speed chase with the
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L.A.P.D. undercover units. I found out that I was under surveillance
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and had to make a run for it!
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MB: Was that pretty close?
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AS: In a Porsche on a canyon road? Not until the helicopter appeared!
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MB: How did you get away?
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AS: I parked the car in a garage after losing them then hid under another
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car for three hours. They eventually gave up looking. I called a
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cab with my cellular phone and left the area. Getting back to getting
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caught. I believe it was from an elaborate multi-company phone trace.
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I didn't think that they would go through all the trouble to try and
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trace my calls though several carriers. But I guess they did. The
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Pacific Bell people were very hot for me. They must have pulled everyone
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together.
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MB: This sounds like a book or a made for TV movie.
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AS: One can only hope.
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