963 lines
48 KiB
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963 lines
48 KiB
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Computer underground Digest Wed Nov 11, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 57
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Coyp Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, Junior
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CONTENTS, #4.57 (Nov 11, 1992)
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File 1--2600 Meeting Disrupted by Secret Service?
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FIle 2--2600 Meeting Disrupted by Law Enforcement
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FIle 3--Reports Of "Raid" On 2600 Washington Meeting
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FIle 4--More first-hand Accounts
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FIle 5--Confusion About Secret Service Role In "2600 Washington Raid"
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FIle 6--Conflicting Stories In 2600 Raid; CRSR Files FOIA
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FIle 7--Transcript from Al Johnson Interview
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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available at no cost from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The editors may be
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contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at:
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Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115.
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
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LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on Genie in the PF*NPC RT
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libraries; from America Online in the PC Telecom forum under
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"computing newsletters;" on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; in
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Europe from the ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893; and using
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anonymous FTP on the Internet from ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in
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/pub/cud, red.css.itd.umich.edu (141.211.182.91) in /cud, halcyon.com
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(192.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud, and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2)
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in /pub/text/CuD.
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European readers can access the ftp site at: nic.funet.fi pub/doc/cud.
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Back issues also may be obtained from the mail
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server at mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us.
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European distributor: ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893.
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and
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they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
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specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
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relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
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preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
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unless absolutely necessary.
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DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
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the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
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responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
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violate copyright protections.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Wed 11 Nov 1992 18:23:55
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From: Moderators<tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 1--2600 Meeting Disrupted by Secret Service?
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On Friday, November 6, the Washington, D.C. 2600 meeting took place at
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the Pentagon City Mall, but was broken up by mall security police.
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There is preliminary evidence that the disruption may have involved
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the United States Secret Service. If the USSS was involved in using
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private security forces to disrupt civilians, their action appears to
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not only exceed its mandate, but to be blatantly illegal. The
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followings posts describe the details, but the basic facts are these:
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1. The Mall's private security police appeared to engage in a
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well-organized and well-coordinated sweep of those participating in
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the meeting. Although there are restrictions that may limit gatherings
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on mall property, there was no apparent indication that the sweep was
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prompted by such restrictions.
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2. The Mall's head of security, Al Johnson (703-415-3410) claimed
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that the FBI and USSS "ramrodded" the operation. Although he has since
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denied making the claim, his comments were recorded by Brock Meeks, a
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reporter for CommDaily. Meeks subsequently called both the FBI and
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Secret Service. The FBI denied any participation. Meeks' report of
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the USSS response suggests they were present at the time. We have read
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a transcript of Al Johnson's response to Meeks, and Johnson explicitly
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and unequivocally states that he considered it a USSS operation and
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that as far as he's concerned, the mall police are "out of it," and he
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referred Meeks to the USSS (See transcript in file #7).
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3. Either Al Johnson is lying or Meeks fabricated the tape. Meeks is
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a highly respected journalist known for accuracy and credibility. His
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integrity has never been questioned, and we find it incomprehensible
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that he fabricated the tape. It seems more likely that Johnson either
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glibly named external agencies to cover up the actions of security
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forces or that he initially spoke the truth then realized (or was
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told) that he should not indicate external involvement. The USSS's
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response, which appears to make them complicit in, if not initiaters
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of, the action, indicates, as John McMullen's final article reveals,
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that they were fully aware of the incident.
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4. Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) has filed a
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Freedom of Information request with the USSS in an attempt to obtain
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further information of USSS involvement.
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If, in fact, the USSS was involved, it reflects an outrageous and
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totally unacceptable abuse of authority and power. If they were
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involved, it indicates that they have learned little from the
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Operation Sun Devil abuses and that it is time to curtail their power.
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If they were involved, their actions represent a direct challenge to
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Constitutional principles of freedom of speech and assembly.
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If those attending the 2600 meeting violated mall policies against
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assembly that limit the size and nature of public gatherings, it is
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fully legitimate for mall security personnel to intervene. However,
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if the intervention was a premediated action in which the USSS
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participated, then the forces designated to protect the Constitution
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have over-stepped their bounds and threaten once again to subvert the
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principles they are sworn to protect.
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This is not simply a cyberspace issue. If the USSS was involved, it
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raises the issue of the relationship between government police actions
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and the Constitutional freedoms that ostensibly protect us against
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unwarranted control of basic rights. It is an issue that should be of
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concern to everyone. Slippery slopes are highly dangerous terrain.
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The following posts provide additional details. The Newsbytes pieces
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are reproduced here with permission.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 08:52:13 -0500
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From: emmanuel@well.sf.ca.us
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Subject: File 2--2600 Meeting Disrupted by Law Enforcement
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On Friday, November 6th, the 2600 meeting in Washington DC was
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disrupted by assorted law enforcement people. Details are still coming
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in at this point but there are some details that have been
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corroborated by a number of people. This is what we know: Shortly
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after the gathering commenced at the Pentagon City Mall, the 30 or so
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people who were there were surrounded by mall security who demanded
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that everyone consent to searches. They were told that if they refused
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to be searched, they'd be arrested. Everyone's bags were gone through
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and lots of personal property was confiscated including notebooks,
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school work, various tools, a computer keyboard, and many other items.
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The security guards were in radio contact with others on a balcony who
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had been watching the group. One of the attendees was detained by
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security who would neither arrest him nor let him go. After about 10
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minutes, he was released. Some property was returned but much was not.
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No receipts were given and, at one point, the security guards denied
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having anything at all. They then said that if they did have anything,
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the attendees would have to return the next week with proof of
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ownership. The mall police were later joined by local Virginia police,
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who told the group they would be arrested if they didn't leave the
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mall immediately. In addition to searching everybody, the police took
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down the names of everyone present.
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At this point it doesn't look as if there was anything illegal going
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on or anything illegal in anyone's possession. It also should be noted
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that the mall police said they were acting on behalf of the Secret
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Service. The local police would only say they were gathering
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information for an "outside party".
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The following is from Bob Stratton, one of our people on the scene:
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I hope that someone like Inhuman might be able to fill in the details,
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but just as a brief...
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+++++
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I showed up late to the 2600 meeting in DC tonight, and I found
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everyone outside on the sidewalk instead of in the food court of the
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normal meeting place. Evidently they were hassled severely by the mall
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security officers, who took ID, confiscated all manner of property,
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tore up the list of officers' names being compiled by one attendee,
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and threatened to confiscate a camera being used by one attendee to
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record the whole fiasco.
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The real police were called, and evidently made but a cursory
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appearance, though some comment about working with the Secret Service
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was made. The worst thing is that the private security officers who
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took property later denied it, and people are now in a quandary as to
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the best mechanism for recovery of their property.
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I was fortunate enough to have missed the worst of it, though I
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do regret that I wasn't there earlier if only to tell the rent-a-cops
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what I thought of them, and my knowledge of my rights.
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I know that several of the attendees called up to New York, to
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Emmanuel Goldstein, and I'm interested in hearing his take on things.
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Film at 11.
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--Strat
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 09:17:34
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From: jmcmullen@well.sf.ca.us
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Subject: File 3--Reports Of "Raid" On 2600 Washington Meeting
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((The following will appear on Newsbytes tomorrow. Newsbytes is a
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commercial copyrighted service and this article is posted with the
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express permission of the author (reposting is prohibited)))
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WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 NOV 7 (NB) -- Eric Corley, a/k/a
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"Emmanuel Goldstein", editor and publisher of 2600 Magazine: The
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Hacker Quarterly has told Newsbytes that the Friday, November November
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6th 2600 meeting held in the Pentagon City Mall, outside of
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Washington, DC. was disrupted by threats of arrest by mall security
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officers and Arlington, VA police.
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2600 Magazine promotes monthly meetings of hackers, press and other
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interested parties throughout the country. The meetings are held in
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public locations on the first Friday evening of the month and the
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groups often contact each other by telephone during the meetings.
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Corley told Newsbytes that meetings were held that evening in New
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York, Washington, Philadelphia, Cambridge, St. Louis, Chicago, Los
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Angeles and San Francisco. Corley said "While I am sure that meetings
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have been observed by law enforcement agencies, this is the only time
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that we have been harassed. It is definitely a freedom of speech
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issue."
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According to Craig Neidorf, who was present at the meeting handing out
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applications for Computer Professionals For Social Responsibility
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(CPSR), "I saw the security officers focusing on us. Then they started
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to come toward us from a number of directions under what seemed to be
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the direction of a person with a walkie-talkie on a balcony. When they
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approached, I left the group and observed the security personnel
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encircling the group of about 30 gatherers. The group was mainly
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composed of high school and college students. The guards demanded to
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search the knapsacks and bags of the gatherers. They confiscated
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material, including CPSR applications, a copy of Mondo 2000 (a
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magazine) and other material. They also confiscated film from a
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person trying to take pictures of the guards and, when a hacker called
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"HackRat" attempted to copy down the names of the guards, they took
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his pencil and paper."
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Neidorf continued, "I left to go outside and rejoined the group when
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they were ejected from the mall. The guards continued challenging the
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group and told them that they would be arrested if they returned. When
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one of the people began to take pictures of the guards, the apparent
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supervisor became excited and threatening but did not confiscate the
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film."
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Neidorf also said "I think that the raid was planned. They hit right
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about 6:00 and they identified our group as "hackers" and said that
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they knew that this group met every month."
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Neidorf's story was supported by a Washington "hacker" called
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"Inhuman", who told Newsbytes "I arrived at the meeting late and saw
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the group being detained by the guards. I walked along with the group
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as they were being ushered out and when I asked a person who seemed to
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be in authority his name, he pointed at a badge with his name written
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in script on it. I couldn't make out the name and, when I mentioned
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that to the person, he said 'If you can't read it, too bad.' I did
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read his name, 'C. Thomas', from another badge."
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Inhuman also told Newsbytes that, while he did not hear it said, he
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was told by a number of people that the guards said that they were
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'acting on behalf of the Secret Service. "I was also told that there
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were two police officers there from the Arlington County Police
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present but I did not see them."
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Another attendee, Doug Luce posted an account of his on an NY BBS and
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gave Newsbytes permission to quote Luce wrote "I also got to the DC
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meeting very late; 7:45 or so. It seemed like a coordinated harassment
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episode, not geared toward busting anyone, but designed to get people
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riled up, and maybe not come back to the mall. A couple of the things
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I overheard: someone had brought a keyboard to sell, and the cops had
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harassed him about it, saying 'You aren't selling anything in my mall
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without a vendors permit!' Blaize (another attendee) says that maybe
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his handcuffing Hack Rat might have set the cops off; or maybe it was
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the Whisper 2000 that the cops were convinced was a stun gun. The word
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is that there was stuff taken and not given back, wires and soldering
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tools. There is also the rumor that the cops were going through
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everyone's bags and belongings, and that some people were detained.
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While the thrust of the effort seemed to be mall security, there are
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conflicting reports about supporting personnel. Some people said that
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the SS (Secret Service) might have been there, others thought the FBI
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or plainclothes city officers were assisting (or coordinating).
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Supposedly, several of them had removed their name tags before moving
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in."
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Luce's reference to possible Secret Service involvement was supported
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by a 19 year-old college student known as the "Lithium Bandit", who
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told Newsbytes "I got to the mall about 6:15 and saw the group being
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detained by approximately 5 Arlington County police and 5 security
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guards. When I walked over to see what was going on, a security guard
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asked me for an ID and I refused to show it saying that I was about to
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leave. The guard said that I couldn't leave and told me that I had to
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see a police officer. When I did, the officer demanded ID and, when I
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once again refused, informed me that I could be detained for up to 10
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hours for refusing to produce identification. I gave in and produced
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my school ID which the police gave to the security people who copied
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down my name and social security number."
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Lithium Bandit continued "When I asked the police what was behind this
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action, I was told that they couldn't answer but that "the Secret
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Service is involved and we are within our rights doing this. I and
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some others later went to the Arlington police station to attempt to
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get more information. I was told only that there was a report of the
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use of a stolen credit card and 2 officers sent to investigate -- they
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later admitted that it was 5. While I was detained, I heard no mention
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of a credit card and there was no one arrested."
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Marc Rotenberg, director of CPSR's Washington office, told Newsbytes
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"I have really no details on the incident yet but I am very concerned
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about the reports and confiscation of CPSR applications, if true, is
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outrageous. I will find out more facts on Monday.
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Newsbytes was told by the Pentagon City Mall office that any
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information concerning the action would have to come from the director
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of security, Al Johnson, who will not be available until Monday. The
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Arlington Country Police referred Newsbytes to a "press briefing
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recording" which had not been updated since the morning before the
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incident.
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Corley told Newsbytes "there have been no reports of misbehavior by
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any of these people. They were obviously singled out because they were
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hackers. It's as if they were being singled out as an ethnic group. I
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admire the way the group responded -- in a courteous fashion but it is
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inexcusable that it happened. I will be at the next Washington meeting
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to insure that it doesn't happen again."
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The manager of one of New York state's largest malls provided
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background information to Newsbytes on the rights of malls to police
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those on mall property, saying "The primary purpose of a mall is to
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sell. The interior of the mall is private property and is subject to
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the regulations of the mall. The only requirement is that the
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regulations be enforced in an even-handed manner. I do not allow
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political activities in my mall so I could not make an exception for
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Democrats. We do allow community groups to meet but they must request
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space at least two weeks before the meeting and must have proper
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insurance. Our regulations also say that groups of more than 4 may not
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congregate in the mall. We would ask groups larger than that to
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disperse. We would also ask for identification from those who violate
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our regulations so that we may bar them from the mall for a period of
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6 months."
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She added "Some people feel that mall atriums and food courts are
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public space. They are not and the industry is united on this. If the
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malls were to receive tax benefits for the common space and public
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service in snow removal and the like, it could possibly be a public
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area but malls are taxed on the entire space and are totally private
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property, subject to their own regulations. If a group of 20 or more
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congregated in my mall, they would be asked to leave."
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 08:52:13 -0500
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From: emmanuel@well.sf.ca.us
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Subject: File 4--More first-hand Accounts
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((MODERATORS NOTE: The following first-hand accounts were collected
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by Emmanuel Goldstein, editor of 2600)).
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***************
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ACCOUNT #1:
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This is my personal statement as to exactly what happened during the
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DC 2600 raid on Friday, November 7th 1992. Granted I cannot remember
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the exact dialogue that was exchanged, I will get the general meaning
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of everything said and done, by both parties.
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I arrived at the 2600 meeting, with Loki, at approximately
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4:30pm. We headed towards the food court after looking throughout a
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few electronics stores in interest to grab a bite to eat. After
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eating, we proceeded to the fourth floor, to scope out on everything
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before the meeting actually started. On the way up to the fourth
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floor, we ran into Tomellicas. We consulted for a few minutes, and
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then all went up to the fourth floor. We continued to hang out on the
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fourth floor, and then we saw Albatross back down on the first floor,
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so we hollered on got his attention, then proceeded back up to the
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fourth floor. Shortly after, Psionic Nemesis arrived on the scene.
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We continued to hang out, then proceeded back to the first floor.
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After arriving down on the first floor, we moved tables together,
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rearranged the seating layout, then proceeded with the meeting.
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Knight Lightning arrived a little before 6:00 and handed out some
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literature, along with a kooky little button. People slowly arrived,
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and the meeting was underway.
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At this point, the fed scene started to pick up drastically.
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Tomellicas was snapping pictures of every single fed (or what appeared
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to be) there. After chatting for awhile longer, Techno Caster, Hack
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Rat, and a few others arrived (maybe not in that order). Hack Rat
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came over to my table, or part of the table, where I slapped my
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handcuffs that I had brought on him. At this time, Techno Caster had
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showed his Whisper 2000 to Metal Head. Immediately there after,
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several members of the Mall Security task force <chuckle> surrounded
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the area, demanding to see the 'stun gun'. Naturally denying
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everything about a stun gun, the hostility grew. Finally one of the
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guards saw what they thought was the stun gun, and pointed at the
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Whisper 2000, which was in the hands of (I think) Metal Head. Metal
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Head told the officers "This? This is *the* Whisper 2000!", the guard
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examined it, questioned what we had it for, and basically just
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pestered us some more.
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One of the guards (who seemed to be the leader at this point) came
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over across the table from me, and was looking at the stuff on the
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center of the table, in front of Loki and myself. Then, over his
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walkie-talkie, I heard them say something about handcuffs. Without
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hesitating, the guard said "Who has the handcuffs?", I then said "I
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do." At this point the guard was examining my handcuffs, and
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questioned me as to why I had them. Basically telling him just
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because I felt like it, did nothing but aggravate him, and the
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situation. He then asked me to produce identification. I asked as to
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why and the discussion went on for about sixty seconds, when I just
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decided to give him my ID because I was just plain sick of this
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ignorant discussion. He copied everything down from it, and asked me
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what my name was. I simply asked him if he was having trouble reading
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it, and he sneered at me. At this point, the rest of the guards
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started taking identification from others. The guard who had took my
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ID had asked Loki, sitting right across one side of the table from me,
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to see the contents of his backpack. Loki declined, and the guard
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asked again. The guard switched topics, and asked Loki to produce
|
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identification. Loki then handed him about 4 different forms of ID,
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the only thing he was missing was a birth certificate. The guard
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asked to see the contents of his bag, and once again Loki declined.
|
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The argument went back and forth for another minute or two, when Loki
|
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boldly exclaimed "You cannot search my bag, but I will show you what
|
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is in it." Loki proceeded to show him everything in the bag at this
|
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point. After pulling a few things that looked very suspicious to the
|
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guard out of his bag (read: after pulling a few soldered connections,
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a bundle of phone cable, and a couple of electronic devices out of his
|
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bag...). At this time, I turned to my left to see a rather large guy
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wearing a nice suit who appeared to be taking over the command of the
|
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rent-a-cops. I immediately asked him his name, or two see some form
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of identification after he was doing the same to other people at the
|
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meeting. He flat out said "No.". So I just sighed at the entire
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ignorance of the man. Tomellicas quickly snapped a few pictures of
|
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him, and other guards there who wouldn't identify themselves. The
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guard literally took the film out of Tomellicas's camera at this
|
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point. Hack Rat had proceeded to make a list of the guards names who
|
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were involved. After the guards noticed this, they took the list Hack
|
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Rat had compiled, and ripped it up, keeping the shreds. At this
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point, on the other side of my table, I watched Loki zipping his bag
|
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back up after having a few things taken out of it. The big guy in the
|
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suit came and studied the stuff that had been taken out of his bag and
|
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asked Loki what he was doing with it. After exchanging words for
|
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|
about 2 minutes, the big guy proceeded to research Loki's bag. Noted
|
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|
that Loki gave no permission for the guy to search it, he just plain
|
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|
started going through it. At this point I wanted my handcuffs back,
|
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and I was out of there. I couldn't handle this sort of police
|
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harassment and basic bullshit. I told the guard I wanted my handcuffs
|
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back, and he refused. I asked for a receipt, and he refused. I said
|
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"I'm leaving, I have better things to do than to be harassed by a
|
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|
buncha rent-a-cops." <granted under my breath, but he still heard me>
|
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he proceeded to say "Sit back down.". At this point I just figured I
|
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|
might as well do whatever they wanted so I could just go home and see
|
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the Bulls game.
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|
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This irrelevant search continued to go on for roughly a little
|
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less than two hours. None of the guards would give us any reason for
|
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why we were being detained, or why we were being searched. After
|
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sitting there for roughly two hours, we were all starting to get a
|
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little (lot) uptight about the whole situation and starting demanding
|
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we know why we were being held there and searched. One of the guards
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said that he thought we had a stun gun and that's why we were being
|
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searched. I made it really clear to him that (a) stun guns are not
|
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illegal in the state of virginia, and (b) after we showed him what he
|
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(they) saw, and he saw that it was hardly a stun gun, but an amplified
|
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sound device for deaf people, that he had no right to search us any
|
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further, let alone everyone there.
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Denying that these laws were infact true, he told me to shut up.
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Laughing at his idiocy, I just sat there, preparing for hari-kari.
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Finally, after about another thirty minutes of bullshit, we were told
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to leave the mall immediately. Not understanding why, myself and
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others questioned him as to why we were being detained, searched, and
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kicked out. He gave no reason, except to say that this was private
|
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property, and that if we did not leave, we would be arrested, by the
|
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one Arlington County cop now on the scene. Just wanting to go see the
|
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Bulls game, I proceeded to leave, with Hack Rat, Tomellicas, and
|
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someone else who I forgot was at this time. We left the scene, and
|
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proceeded to Crystal City Underground, where we met up with Techno
|
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Caster and a couple others discussing the torment we had all just
|
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experienced.
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Let alone the embarrassment of all the people watching us over the
|
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balcony.
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|
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Saturday, November 7th, 1992. Hack Rat and I thought it would be wise
|
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to contact the Pentagon Mall Security office on three-way. I called
|
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information, obtained the number (703/415-3410). I called the number
|
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and a lady picked up on the other end. I told her that I would like
|
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to speak with whoever was in charge, or present at the raid in the
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food court last night. She told me that nobody was there, they were
|
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either sick, or not working today. I told her "Out of the roughly 8
|
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people there last night, they are all sick? That's bullshit. I want
|
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to speak with someone who was there last night, or I want all of the
|
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officers names, and the name of the person in charge." She told me
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I'd have to call back in 30 minutes. I wait.
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Thirty minutes later, Hack Rat and I call back. The same lady answers
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and I ask to speak to someone present, or the man in charge of the
|
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food court raid last night. She said please hold. I was transfered
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somewhere. A man picked up the phone, this voice was very familiar,
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and I could easily match it with the guy who took my handcuffs from
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me, the one who told me to shut up. I asked him what his name was,
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and the names of everyone there, and of whoever was in charge. He
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said that he was not allowed to give that information out. After
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dealing with the idiocy for another 5 minutes, tension grew along with
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the hostility.
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After a little more social engineering, I was able to bs a name out of
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him. Al Johnson, who was supposedly the head of security.
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After this, I called up Loki. We called Fenris Wolf on three way.
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Fenris told us that one of his parental units called the mall security
|
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office to find that Loki's bag had been 'turned over to federal
|
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authorities'.
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Loki, never given a receipt for his bag, even after asking, was
|
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extremely pissed at this point.
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The Mad Hatter
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*************************************
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ACCOUNT #2:
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|
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dead cow #16 @1 [imic]
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Sun Nov 08 15:21:42 1992
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here's my story, as i witnessed it.
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i was coming down the escalator when i noticed that there were a
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bunch of people standing around and all these cops in the center. so i
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rushed up to the center and asked the cops what was going on. the cop
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said "i have nothing to say to you" so i asked who i could talk to. he
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said that nobody had anything to say, that no one would talk to me.
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then i was questioned about my relation to this group. i denied any
|
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relation. i was then asked to leave, at which point i moved over to a
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group of 2600 people standing at a distance observing. i attempted to
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ask them what was going on, but at that point the mall cop wearing a
|
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bike outfit (what was with that guy?) asked us to leave. i walked most
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of the way to the door then stopped to remove my camera from my bag,
|
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meanwhile asking if i could stay long enough to use the bathroom. they
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told me that i had to use the metro bathroom. i said that i didn't
|
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think there was one. they said yes, ask the attendant. i then got my
|
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camera out and asked if i could take a picture. the guard said, in a
|
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threatening voice, that if i took his pic he would take my film. i put
|
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the camera in my pocket. i had a couple of old motherboards in my
|
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hands, they asked me what they were, i said they were old
|
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motherboards, they asked each other if (some guy who's name i didn't
|
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catch) would be interested in these. i said they could have them if
|
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they wanted, they were worth about $2. they said, no, they weren't
|
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gonna take them, just leave. i stalled a few more times, and then they
|
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said that if i stalled one mor time i would be arrested. i left the
|
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mall at that pt.
|
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|
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we then went up the metro escalator, and stood around in a group at
|
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the top of the escalator. the mall cops were there, in the mall
|
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driveway, in their car. at some point, a group of mall cops came out
|
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and were very belligerent with someone. i stood back at a distance and
|
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took a picture, then turned away and started walking. the cops yelled
|
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after me, i gave my camera to another person. they wanted my film, i
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said i didn't have the camera. gentry jumped in and started arguing
|
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with the man, telling him that it was legal to take the picture. the
|
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man became very angry with gentry, and then started yelling about how
|
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he was here not to warn us about leaving the area, but to tell us to
|
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move our cars (all our cars were parked someplace else) from the curb,
|
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where there were SOME cars, because the arlington cops were coming. we
|
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said that we didn't have any cars, and he ignored that and proceded to
|
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warn us again. then he turned and gestured at gentry with his hand. at
|
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the same point gentry brought his hand up to scratch his head, and the
|
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hands met. the mall cop became very angry and told gentry that if he
|
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touched the mall cop again he would do some thing (i forget the
|
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threat) then we started talking about the camera, and the mall cop
|
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denied that he had ever wanted the film. after that, the mall cop
|
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left. then we left.
|
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|
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that's what happened..
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|
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dc
|
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|
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+++++++++++++
|
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|
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ACCOUNT #3:
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|
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Inhuman November 8th, 1992
|
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|
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What follows is my account of the events as I observed them at
|
|||
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Pentagon City Fashion Center Mall on the evening of Friday, November
|
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6th.
|
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|
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I arrived at the mall around 6:45 p.m., almost two hours after the
|
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meeting began. I recognized a group of people on the food court to be
|
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part of the meeting and started heading towards them. At this point,
|
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I noticed that there were several mall security personnel and perhaps
|
|||
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other law enforcement officials (I'm not sure) spread throughout the
|
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meeting area. Most were just standing there, some were talking to the
|
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meeting-goers.
|
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|
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|
Since nothing too dangerous seemed to be happening, I walked into
|
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the middle of the meeting area, looking at all the guards. I asked
|
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one of the meeting-goers what was going on and he said "We're being
|
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detained." I then asked one of the guards (a young caucasian blonde
|
|||
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male in a blue spandex biking outfit) what was going on. He replied,
|
|||
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"You'll find out from your friends afterwards. Why don't you go wait
|
|||
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with your friends over there.", indicating the group of people I
|
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entered the mall with.
|
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|
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|
I left the food court. Some of the guards looked slightly upset that
|
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I was leaving, but made no move to stop me. I waited out-of-view of
|
|||
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the food court for about five minutes and then returned. At this
|
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|
point, meeting-goers were just beginning to leave the food court area
|
|||
|
in the direction of the mall exit, apparently having been released
|
|||
|
from their detention. Guards remained on the outskirts of the group,
|
|||
|
directing them towards the exit.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
I asked one of the guards (a middle-aged heavy-set
|
|||
|
african-american male) if we had to leave, and he said yes. When I
|
|||
|
protested, he threatened to arrest me for trespassing since "this is
|
|||
|
private property." When I asked what his name was, he pointed to his
|
|||
|
name tag. The name tag had nothing more than a legal signature on it,
|
|||
|
which was quite unreadable. When asked him what his name was again,
|
|||
|
explaining that I couldn't read his name tag, he said, "You can't read
|
|||
|
my name tag? Too bad." Then I noticed he had another name tag with
|
|||
|
"C. Thomas" clearly printed on it. At this point, Dead Cow, who was
|
|||
|
nearby, asked if he could take the guard's picture. The guard said
|
|||
|
that if he did, he would take the film out of the camera. When then
|
|||
|
left the mall, along with the rest of the group.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
We waited in the Metrorail (D.C. public transportation) access
|
|||
|
tunnel directly outside of the mall for a while, gathering information
|
|||
|
from each other and deciding on a course of action.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We went upstairs and outside, to a small bank of payphones near
|
|||
|
the Metro entrance and near the mall's outside entrance. One of the
|
|||
|
meeting-goers, Lithium Bandit, called the Washington Post and
|
|||
|
recounted the story, hoping to get a reporter to the scene. They said
|
|||
|
they would call back if they were interested. Several suggestions
|
|||
|
were made to call News Channel 8, a cable 24-hours-a-day local news
|
|||
|
channel, but the call was never made. About twenty of us remained at
|
|||
|
this point, there having been around forty total.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
About ten minutes later, the mall security guards reappeared. I
|
|||
|
was on the phone with Emmanuel Goldstein at the time, so I didn't see
|
|||
|
the initial interactions, and I'm still not clear what they were
|
|||
|
trying to tell us to do this time, as we were no longer on private
|
|||
|
property. At some point, Dead Cow took his camera out and took a
|
|||
|
couple pictures of the scene. At this, the guards, especially C.
|
|||
|
Thomas, became incensed. Thomas demanded the film, somehow claiming
|
|||
|
that Dead Cow was not allowed to take a picture of him. The film
|
|||
|
remained in our possesion. Then Gentry, another meeting-goer, began
|
|||
|
to get in an argument with C. Thomas over Dead Cow's right to take his
|
|||
|
picture, and the general rights violations that had occured already.
|
|||
|
At some point, Gentry apparently touched C. Thomas in an inadvertent
|
|||
|
manner. Thomas then yelled very loudly, "Don't TOUCH me!" and made
|
|||
|
some threat about what he would do if Gentry touched him again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
People began to leave now, to regroup at the Crystal City
|
|||
|
Underground, including me, so thus ends my account.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 09:17:35
|
|||
|
From: jmcmullen@well.sf.ca.us
|
|||
|
Subject: File 5--Confusion About Secret Service Role D.C. "Raid"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
((The following will appear on Newsbytes. Newsbytes is a copyrighted
|
|||
|
commercial service and its material may not be reproduced. This
|
|||
|
article is posted with the express permission of the authors.))
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 NOV 7 (NB) -- In the aftermath of an
|
|||
|
action on Friday, November 6th by members of the Pentagon City Mall
|
|||
|
Police and police from Arlington County, VA in which those attending a
|
|||
|
2600 meeting at the mall were ordered from the premises, conflicting
|
|||
|
stories continue to appear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Attendees at the meeting have contended to Newsbytes that members of
|
|||
|
the mall police told them that they were "acting on behalf of the
|
|||
|
Secret Service.". They also maintain that the mall police confiscated
|
|||
|
material from knapsacks and took film from someone attempting to
|
|||
|
photograph the action and a list of the names of security officers
|
|||
|
that one attendee was attempting to compile.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Al Johnson, chief of security for the mall, denied these allegations
|
|||
|
to Newsbytes, saying "No one said that we were acting on behalf of the
|
|||
|
Secret Service. We were merely enforcing our regulations. While the
|
|||
|
group was not disruptive, it had pulled tables together and was having
|
|||
|
a meeting in our food court area. The food court is for people eating
|
|||
|
and is not for meetings. We therefore asked the people to leave."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Johnson denied that security personnel took away any film or lists and
|
|||
|
further said "We did not confiscate any material. The group refused to
|
|||
|
own up to who owned material on the tables and in the vicinity so we
|
|||
|
collected it as lost material. If it turns out that anything did
|
|||
|
belong to any of those people, they are welcome to come in and, after
|
|||
|
making proper identification, take the material."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In a conversation early on November 9th, Robert Rasor, Secret Service
|
|||
|
agent-in-charge of computer crime investigations, told Newsbytes that
|
|||
|
having mall security forces represent the Secret Service is not
|
|||
|
something that was done and, that to his knowledge, the Secret Service
|
|||
|
had no involvement with any Pentagon City mall actions on the previous
|
|||
|
Friday.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A Newsbytes call to the Arlington County police was returned by a
|
|||
|
Detective Nuneville who said that her instructions were to refer all
|
|||
|
questions concerning the matter to agent David Adams of the Secret
|
|||
|
Service. She told Newsbytes that Adams would be providing all
|
|||
|
information concerning the involvement of both the Arlington Police
|
|||
|
and the Secret Service in the incident.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Adams told Newsbytes "The mall police were not acting as agents for
|
|||
|
the Secret Service. Beyond that, I can not confirm or deny that there
|
|||
|
is an ongoing investigation."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Adams also told Newsbytes that "While I cannot speak for the Arlington
|
|||
|
police, I understand that their involvement was due to an incident
|
|||
|
unrelated to the investigation."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Marc Rotenberg, director of the Washington office of Computer
|
|||
|
Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR), told Newsbytes "CPSR
|
|||
|
has reason to believe that the detention of people at the Pentagon
|
|||
|
City Mall last Friday was undertaken at the behest of the Secret
|
|||
|
Service, which is a federal agency. If that is the case, then there
|
|||
|
was an illegal search of people at the mall. There was no warrant and
|
|||
|
no indication of probable illegal activity. This raises constitutional
|
|||
|
issues. We have undertaken the filing of a Freedom of Information Act
|
|||
|
(FOIA) request to determine the scope, involvement and purpose of the
|
|||
|
Secret Service in this action."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2600 meetings are held on the evening of the first Friday of each
|
|||
|
month in public places and malls in New York City, Washington,
|
|||
|
Philadelphia, Cambridge, St. Louis, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
|
|||
|
Francisco. They are promoted by 2600 Magazine: The Hacker Quarterly
|
|||
|
and are attended by a variety of persons interested in
|
|||
|
telecommunications and so-called "hacker issues". The New York
|
|||
|
meeting, the oldest of its kind, is regularly attended by Eric Corley
|
|||
|
a/k/a Emmanuel Goldstein, editor and publisher of 2600, hackers,
|
|||
|
journalists, corporate communications professionals and other
|
|||
|
interested parties. It is known to have been the subject of
|
|||
|
surveillance at various times by law enforcement agencies conducting
|
|||
|
investigations into allegations of computer crime.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Corley told Newsbytes "While I'm sure that meetings have been observed
|
|||
|
by law enforcement agencies, this is the only time that we have been
|
|||
|
harassed. It's definitely a freedom of speech issue." Corley also that
|
|||
|
he plans to be at the December meeting in Washington "to insure that
|
|||
|
it doesn't happen again."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1992 09:17:34
|
|||
|
From: jmcmullen@well.sf.ca.us
|
|||
|
Subject: File 6--Conflicting Stories In 2600 Raid; CRSR Files FOIA
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
((The following will appear on Newsbytes. Newsbytes is a copyrighted
|
|||
|
commercial service and its material may not be reproduced. This
|
|||
|
article is posted with the express permission of the authors.))
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1992 NOV 11 (NB) -- In the on-going
|
|||
|
investigation of possible Secret Service involvement in the Friday,
|
|||
|
November 6th ejection of attendees at a "2600 meeting" from the
|
|||
|
premises of the Pentagon City Mall, diametrically opposed statements
|
|||
|
have come from the same source.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Al Johnson, chief of security for the Pentagon City Mall told
|
|||
|
Newsbytes on Monday, November 9th "No one said that we were acting on
|
|||
|
behalf of the Secret Service. We were merely enforcing our
|
|||
|
regulations. While the group was not disruptive, it had pulled tables
|
|||
|
together and was having a meeting in our food court area. The food
|
|||
|
court is for people eating and is not for meetings. We therefore asked
|
|||
|
the people to leave."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the same day, Johnson was quoted was quoted in a Communications
|
|||
|
Daily article by Brock Meeks as saying "As far as I'm concerned, we're
|
|||
|
out of this. The Secret Service, the FBI, they're the ones that
|
|||
|
ramrodded this whole thing."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Newsbytes contacted Meeks to discuss the discrepancies in the stories
|
|||
|
and were informed that the conversation with Johnson had been taped
|
|||
|
and was available for review. The Newsbytes reporter listened to the
|
|||
|
tape (and reviewed a transcript). On the tape, Johnson was clearly
|
|||
|
heard to make the statement quoted by Meeks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He also said "maybe you outta call the Secret Service, they're
|
|||
|
handling this whole thing. We, we were just here", and, in response
|
|||
|
to a Meeks question about a Secret Service contact, "Ah.. you know, I
|
|||
|
don't have a contact person. These people were working on their own,
|
|||
|
undercover, we never got any names, but they definitely, we saw
|
|||
|
identification, they were here."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Newsbytes contacted Johnson again on the morning of Wednesday,
|
|||
|
November 11 and asked him once again whether there was any Secret
|
|||
|
Service involvement in the action. Johnson said "No, I told you that
|
|||
|
they were not involved." When it was mentioned that there was a story
|
|||
|
in Communications Daily, quoting him to the contrary, Johnson said "I
|
|||
|
never told Meeks that. There was no Secret Service involvement"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Informed of the possible existence of a tape quoting him to the
|
|||
|
contrary. Johnson said "Meeks taped me? He can't do that. I'll show
|
|||
|
him that I'm not fooling around. I'll have him arrested."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Johnson also said "He asked me if the Secret Service was involved; I
|
|||
|
just told him that, if he thought they were, he should call them and
|
|||
|
ask them."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then Johnson again told Newsbytes that the incident was "just a mall
|
|||
|
problem. There were too many people congregating."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[NOTE: Newsbytes stands by its accurate reporting of Johnson's
|
|||
|
statements. It also affirms that the story by Meeks accurately
|
|||
|
reflects the material taped during his interview]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In a related matter, Marc Rotenberg, director of the Washington office
|
|||
|
of Computer Professionals For Social Responsibility (CPSR) has
|
|||
|
announced that CPSR has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
|
|||
|
request with the Secret Service asking for information concerning
|
|||
|
Secret Service involvement in the incident.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rotenberg told Newsbytes that the Secret Service has 10 days to
|
|||
|
respond to the request. He also said that CPSR "is exploring other
|
|||
|
legal options in this matter."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Secret Service, in earlier conversations with Newsbytes, has
|
|||
|
denied that the mall security was working on its behalf.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the incident itself, a group attending the informal meeting was
|
|||
|
disbanded and, according to attendees, had property confiscated. They
|
|||
|
also contend that security guards took film from someone photographing
|
|||
|
the confiscation as well as a list that someone was making of the
|
|||
|
guard's names. In his November 9th conversation with Newsbytes,
|
|||
|
Johnson denied that security personnel took away any film or lists and
|
|||
|
further said "We did not confiscate any material. The group refused to
|
|||
|
own up to who owned material on the tables and in the vicinity so we
|
|||
|
collected it as lost material. If it turns out that anything did
|
|||
|
belong to any of those people, they are welcome to come in and, after
|
|||
|
making proper identification, take the material."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2600 meetings are promoted by 2600 Magazine: The Hacker Quarterly and
|
|||
|
are held on the evening of the first Friday of each month in public
|
|||
|
places and malls in New York City, Washington, Philadelphia,
|
|||
|
Cambridge, St. Louis, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. They
|
|||
|
are regularly attended by a variety of persons interested in
|
|||
|
telecommunications and so-called "hacker issues".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Barbara E. McMullen & John F. McMullen/19921111)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Date: Wed 11 Nov 1992 19:34:56
|
|||
|
From: Moderators<tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
|
|||
|
Subject: File 7--Transcript from Al Johnson Interview
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
((MODERATORS' NOTE: Al Johnson, Director of Security for the Pentagon
|
|||
|
City Mall, has denied saying that the US Secret Service was involved
|
|||
|
in the 2600 disruption, and he has given other news sources a
|
|||
|
different version than he gave to Brock Meeks. The following are Al
|
|||
|
Johnson's original comments as transcribed from the original
|
|||
|
conversation. We leave it to readers to decide for themselves what Al
|
|||
|
Johnson said in the initial interview.))
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Further information may be obtained from Brock Meeks at:
|
|||
|
(202) 872-9202 ex. 271; or
|
|||
|
2115 Ward Ct. NW, Washington, DC 20037
|
|||
|
+++++
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Transcript of interview with Mr. Al Johnson, Dir. Security for
|
|||
|
Pentagon City Mall
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: I'd like to ask you a few questions about an incident where
|
|||
|
some of your security guards broke up a meeting of some hackers
|
|||
|
on Friday (Nov. 6).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Al Johnson: They broke up some meeting of hackers?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Yes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: I don't know about breaking any meeting up. Who... first of
|
|||
|
all I can't talk to you on the phone, if you want to come in, I
|
|||
|
don't talk to the press on the phone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: OK
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Ahh... maybe you outta call the Secret Service, they're
|
|||
|
handling this whole thing. We, we were just here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: the Secret Service was part of this?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Well, FBI, Secret Service, everybody was here, so you might
|
|||
|
want to call their office and talk to them. There's not much I
|
|||
|
can really tell you here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: OK
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Our involvement was minimum, you know, minimal.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: I see, but your folks were acting on...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: We didn't break anything... I.. we didn't.. as far as I
|
|||
|
know, well I can't say much on the phone. But I, well,
|
|||
|
somebody's awfully paranoid apparently. Where'd you get this
|
|||
|
information from?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Umm.... from computer bulletin boards
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Bulletin Boards?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Yep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: When did you get it?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: I got it, ah, Sunday night.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Sunday night?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Yep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: [small laugh] Ah, yeah, you gotta call the FBI and the
|
|||
|
Secret Service there's not much I can do for you here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Ok. Al, if I come down there will you talk to me to down
|
|||
|
there?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: No. I can't talk to you at all. Fact is, there's nothing
|
|||
|
to talk about. Our involvement in anything was minimal, I don't
|
|||
|
know where this information came from as far as bulletin boards,
|
|||
|
and breaking meetin's up and you know...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Well, the Arlington police were down there too. I mean I've
|
|||
|
talked to several of the kids that were involved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Um-hmmm
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: They said, that ah, members of your, of the mall security
|
|||
|
forces, ah, or security staff, searched them, confiscated some
|
|||
|
material and didn't give it back. Did any of this happen?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Like I said, I'm not, I'm not able to talk to you... we have
|
|||
|
a policy that we don't talk to the press about anything like
|
|||
|
that. You can call the Secret Service, call the FBI, they're the
|
|||
|
ones that ramrodded this whole thing, and you talk to them, we're
|
|||
|
out of this basically, you know, as far as I'm concerned here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Ok. Is there a contact person over there that you can...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Ah.. you know, I don't have a contact person. These people
|
|||
|
were working on their own, undercover, we never got any names,
|
|||
|
but they definitely, we saw identification, they were here.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: They were there. So it was all the Secret Service and none
|
|||
|
of your men?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Ah, nah, that's not what I said. But they're the ones you
|
|||
|
want to talk to. There's nothing I can really ya. Okay?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Okay.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AJ: Thanks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B. Meeks: Bye.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #4.57
|
|||
|
************************************
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|