414 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
414 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
It started out as just another Saturday. April 26, 1986. John R.
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MacDougall, 25, spent the day alone at his satellite TV dealership in Ocala,
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Florida, waiting for customers who never came. "It was," he says, "a normal
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day in the doldrums of the satellite TV industry." But that night, MacDougall,
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5 feet 11, 225 pounds, and prone to nervously running his fingers through his
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reddish blond hair and adjusting his glasses, would transform into Captain
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Midnight and set the world of satellite television spinning.
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Business had been flat since January 15, when Home Box Office became the
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first pay TV service to scramble its signal full time. Other services were
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following HBO's lead. Dish owners were balking at the cost of descramblers and
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program fees. Potential customers were confused and stayed away in droves.The
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1985 boom in dish sales had simply petered out, and MacDougall Electronics, in
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business for just two-and-a-half years, had seen its early profits disappear.
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American Dream
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MacDougall had stopped advertising and turned off his air-conditioner to save
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money. With no customers, he idled away the day watching TV and reading
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magazines. Later, he would say, "I have been watching the great American dream
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slip from my grasp."
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To make ends meet, MacDougall spent his evenings moonlighting as a part-time
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operations engineer at Central Florida Teleport, a local company that uplinks
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services to satellites. He was a natural electronics engineer. A good
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student, he had spent his spare time during his teenage years tinkering with CB
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radios and automobiles. With some pals, he rebuilt a 1923 Ford roadster that
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he still owns. He had dropped out of a management engineering course at
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Worcester Polytechnical Institute in Massachusetts after two years, but his
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first job was installing satellite TV dishes."My father used to tell me I would
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need to get a job where I would be able to make money by watching TV just
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because I liked TV so much," he says. At Central Florida Teleport, he could do
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just that. At 4 p.m. on that Saturday, MacDougall shut up shop. He stopped
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at his home, where he lived alone, picked up a sandwich for supper, and then
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reported to the teleport. After two hours, a second engineer went off duty and
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MacDougall was alone in the small building that is flanked on one side by five
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large satellite dishes.
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As the end of his shift drew near, MacDougall was absently watching Pee-Wee's
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Big Adventure, a movie he was uplinking for the now-defunct pay-per-view
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service, People's Choice. But something else was on his mind. When the film
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ended, MacDougall went through the normal routine. Before logging off, he set
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up color bars and punched buttons to swing the giant 30 foot dish he'd been
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using to its resting place. That was necessary because the soil beneath the
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dish's cement pad is sandy clay. Rainfall could throw it off-kilter, but by
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setting it in a certain way the rain runs harmlessly into a gutter. At its
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resting place, the dish points directly at the satellite Galaxy 1.
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Transpondedr 23 on that satellite carries the eastern feed of HBO. "That's
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when I decided to do it,"says MacDougall. "It wasn't like I thought about it,
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'Yes. No. Yes. No.' It was just, 'Yeah!'" He scrolled up a character
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generator, and electronic keyboard that puts letters across the TV screen, and
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tried to think what to write. "I didn't know exactly how to start it," he
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says. "I wrote 'Goodevening." I wanted to be polite. I didn't want it to be
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vulgar or call them names or anything. That's not my style."
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He spent a couple of minutes composing his message. The idea of using the
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name Captain Midnight, he says, "just popped into my mind." He had recently
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seen a movie with that title about a teenager who had a pirate radio station in
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his van. Now HBO was airing the Sean Penn and Timothy Hutton espionage movie,
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The Falcon and the Snowman. It was at 12:32 a.m. Sunday, April 27, that John
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R. MacDougall pushed the transmit button on his console and turned into
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Captain Midnight. "That's when I hit it," he says. "It was almost like an
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out-of-body experience. It was like I was there but I wasn't really there."
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For 4 1/2 minutes, HBO viewers in the eastern United States saw this message:
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GOODEVENING HBO
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FROM CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
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$12.95/MONTH?
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NO WAY!
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(SHOWTIME/MOVIE CHANNEL BEWARE)
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A week earlier, MacDougall had successfully overridden HBO's powerful signal
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momentarily with just a test pattern. (He now publicly denies this, but he
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admitted it to a United States attorney.) The network had quickly brushed that
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signal aside, attributing it to not uncommon accidental interference. This
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time, the engineer on duty at HBO's Long Island, New York, uplink station
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simply stepped up the signal's power. HBO was transmitting at 125 watts. When
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Captain Midnight applied more power, the HBO engineer revved up to match it.
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"He saw the interference and saw that he was losing a grip on things," says
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George Dillon, an engineer who investigated the episode for the enforcement and
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investigative division of the Federal Communications Commission. "This little
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game took 60 to 90 seconds. You had these two people at their respective
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stations fighting for control."
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As Captain Midnight's signal surged, HBO placed a frantic call to Hughes
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Communications Inc., which owns Galaxy 1, asking: "Is there something wrong
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with the bird?" Says Dillon, "HBO thought it might cause damage to the
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satellite, so they gave it up.
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NEVER LOST CONTROL
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In Ocala, Captain Midnight was stunned. "I could see my signal on top of
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HBO's as soon as I hit the transmit button," says MacDougall. "I stared at the
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monitor for a while, and then I didn't know if it was two minutes or 10
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minutes." Caught up with engineering curiosity, he monitored power levels and
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downlink signals. "At no time," he says, "did I lose control over the
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transponder." But then, as suddenly as he had struck, he quit. "When I shut it
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off, I really didn't know how long I had been on top of HBO, but that's when I
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started to feel very guilty," he says. "I thought, "Ohmigod, what did I do?'
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That thought raced through my mind for the next 10 or 15 minutes as I
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reconfigured the teleport back to normal. The guilt really set in that night.
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I didn't sleep very well."
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On Sunday morning he woke up to the same nagging doubts. "I thought maybe I
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should turn myself in. But then I thought, 'Well, let's be rational. Nobody's
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going to see it. Nobody cares. HBO will know. They'll get the message.
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They'll reconsider their arbitrary and unfair pricing, and maybe I'll read
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about it in a few months in Satellite Orbit. That's basically how I
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rationalized, not panicking, and went on with my daily routine that Sunday.'
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Then he saw that Captain Midnight's HBO ambush was making TV's network
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newscasts, and he began to panic. "I was devastated and so nervous with
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frustration. I had to work that night at the teleport. Another man was going
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to be there for the first two hours. When he got there I had to pretend and
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say things like, "Dkid you see this guy Captain Midnight? Geez, do you realize
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what in the world, he could have done?' That was difficult."
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Normally, MacDougall's natural curiosity would have made him the first to
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want to discuss how it was done. But as the event made national headlines and
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became fodder for jokes by David Letterman and Johnny Carson, he went the other
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way, trying to play it down. The tension grew as HBO clamored for his head,
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and the FCC and even Congress got involved.
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On April 28, HBO chairman Michael J. Fuchs wrote to the FCC saying that the
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company had received calls threatening to move Galaxy 1 into a new orbit. He
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urged the Commission to "use all its investigative resources" to capture
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Captain Midnight.
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"This wasn't just a jamming, but a jamming and replacement. And a
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fascinating one at that," says HBO spokesman Alan Levy. "That's why you saw a
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lot of action on this case. We understand that the dish owners are at odds
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with the programmers, but when you escalate it to this point, it gets a little
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wild and woolly. And when you're breaking the satellite system of the United
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States, it's very serious."
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FCC investigator Dillon says the implications of the incident involved a
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threat to the national security. "There's lots of highly sensitive data
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involved. If you have a bandit, it could disrupt the business of the United
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States--things like defense communications, medical information, telephone
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communications, and teleconferences.
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Edgar Eagan, owner of Central Florida Teleport, took the incident very
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seriously. "He logged out and signed the log and decided to stay and play,"
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says Eagan, founder and past president of ESPN, the sports network. "In
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reality he was using the equipment for an unauthorized and illegal purpose."
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RUMORS GALORE
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As the investigation proceeded, rumors abounded. Satellite TV publications
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and television commentators received calls and tapes from people claiming to be
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Captain Midnight. The FBI was said to be on the case, and the hunt was rumored
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to focus on Dallas, Texas.
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In Ocala, MacDougall had decided to "play it dumb." Discreetly, he talked to
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colleagues in the satellite TV business to find out how the investigation was
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going. But gradually he could not resist discussing the incident with other
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engineers and operators who talked about what happens when two signals meet on
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a single transponder. He was outraged when they dismissed his observations.
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"I don't like to say this, but even the more skilled personnel were of the
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assumption that you would never get a clear signal with two signals feeding on
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the same channel," MacDougall says. "I brought out the fact that if one was
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much stronger than the other, it would override it. At that point they told me
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I was wrong, and that I didn't know what I was talking about.
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"All of my life people have never taken my word for things because I've
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always seemed to be a little younger than they are, and maybe a little less
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experienced, but I've always come up with the right answer. They didn't seem
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to believe my theory. Well, I guess they ought to believe it now, because I
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was right."
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THE TIP OFF
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It was a phone call made by a disgruntled dish owner from Ocala that
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concentrated the FCC's investigation on the Central Florida Teleport. Someone
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claiming to be Captain Midnight was overheard by a tourist from Wisconsin at a
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phone booth just off Interstate 75 in Gainesville, Florida. The tourist
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reported the conversation and the man's license plate number to the FCC.
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MacDougall says the impostor was a customer of his, but he doesn't know his
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last name. Again, he was outraged. "He was very militant about scrambling and
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the cable progra business, and not tried to make out like some kind of hero, I
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would still be panicking and wondering whether they were going to come and get
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me."
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MacDougall's voice rises as he exclaims, "I still can't believe this guy
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actually told people he was Captain Midnight and MacDougall says the only time
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he broke the law was driving over the 55 mph speed limit. "I never even bought
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beer under age. I was a model citizen," he says earnestly.
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FCC MOVES IN
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In July, FCC investigators talked to MacDougall, asking questions that led
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him to believe they knew what had happened. He told them he hadn't done it,
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and that he had no knowledge of the incident, but then he really began to
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worry. "I was very concerned about it, but I didn't let on," he says. "I'm
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able to hide my feelings very well. I can just about convince people I'm a
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total raving maniac at the same time."
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Two weeks later, the FCC returned. This time, they brought along U.S.
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Attorney Lawrence Gentile III, who served MacDougall with a subpoena to appear
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in U.S. District Court in Jacksonville. According to MacDougall, their
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conversation went like this:
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"What's this for?" MacDougall asked when Gentile held out the subpoena.
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"Captain Midnight," answered Gentile. "Aren't you aware that you're a
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suspect in this incident?"
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"You're trying to tell me that just because I'm a satellite dish dealer and I
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happened to work for a teleport, I'm a suspect? responded MacDougall.
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"There are other things," replied Gentile.
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"Well, what are they?" asked MacDougall.
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"We can't discuss it here," said Gentile. "We can talk about it in front of
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the grand jury. You need to think very carefully about this. You seem like a
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level-headed man, but you don't seem to be taking this seriously. This is a
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serious time. You might want to consult with an attorney."
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"Attorney for what?" questioned MacDougall. "I haven't done anything. An
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innocent man does not need an attorney. The only people who hire attorneys are
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guilty people."
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According to MacDougall, Gentile then attempted to reach an agreement with
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him. "If you would be willing to talk to us about this and tell us what you
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know about this incident right now," said Gentile, "I'd be willing to recommend
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probation to the judge and a small fine. Probation and a fine are not bad
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considering what you're facing. Let's face it, Mr. MacDougall, this is not
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the crime of the century. However, we have been getting a lot of pressure on
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this."
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MacDougall said at that point he began to think there was not enough evidence
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to convict him; otherwise he wouldn't have been offered a plea bargain. Still
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claiming innocence, MacDougall told Gentile he would see him in Jacksonville.
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MacDougall's first brief jamming raid on HBO led investigators to strongly
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suspect him. The investigation had been narrowed down to uplink stations with
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the capacity to pull off both raids, and then to those manned by the same
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person at the time of each incident. "We had a very good idea he was our man,"
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says Gentile. "Of all the people I talked with, he was the only one I gave
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target warnings to [the equivalent of the Miranda warnings police give when
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they make an arrest]. "He says he leaned on MacDougall "pretty hard."
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MEET CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
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Taking Gentile's advice, MacDougall contacted an Ocala attorney, John Green
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Jr. When they first met, MacDougall recalls, "he said, 'Well, John, tell me
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about Captain Midnight.' And I reached out my hand and said, 'Well, here,
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that's me.'"
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Green advised him that he had a 70-percent chance of winning the case. If
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convicted, he faced a $100,000 fine and/or one year in jail. But MacDougall
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decided to enter a plea of guilty. "There were two reasons," he said. "I
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could release my guilt, plead guilty, and get it over with, do the right thing.
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That kept panging at me: do the right thing. But the other side, the
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activist, kept saying, 'Stand up for your rights.' My idealism and my activism
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were combating my conservative upbringing and my conservative political
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leanings. They were battling back and forth, and I was at my wits' end. I
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didn't know what to do."
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MacDougall also worried about going before the grand jury and trying to lie
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his way out of the charge. "I would not have wanted to take a midemeanor and
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make it a felony by committing perjury," he says. In the end, the determining
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factor was money. Green advised his client that going to trial could take 6 to
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12 months and cost $30,000 to $40,000. "During that time," MacDougall says, "I
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couldn't have said anything, and I would have been bombarded by the press. It
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would have been a nightmare."
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Fighting and then losing the case was always a possibility, and MacDougall
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conjured up nightmares of what that might entail. "This was a federal
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penitentiary they could have sent me to," he said. "The concept just didn't
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register, to be sitting eating lunch with the other convicts in striped
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uniforms, and a guy says, 'Hey, what are you in for?" And I say, 'Oh, I
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operated a trnsmitter without a license.' I couldn't take the risk."
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FUN EDUCATION
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By the time he went to the federal court on July 22 and went through the
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arrest procedure, which included being photographed and fingerprinted,
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MacDougall's curiosity was back in full force. "If I hadn't been directly
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involved, it probably would have been a fun educational experience," he says.
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"You can't just plead guilty to a crime. It's hours and hours of discussion,
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and you have to prove to the prosecutor, and also the judge, that you are
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guilty. Then, you have to prove you weren't coerced into making the statement,
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and that you have knowledge of your rights." MacDougall says officials at both
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the July 22 hearing and the sentencing, on August 26, were surprisingly
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cordial. He speaks of smiles, handshakes from marshals, and understanding from
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U.S. Magistrate Howard T. Snyder, who fined him $5,000 and placed him on one
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year's probation. "I'm glad to see that the legal system does work," he says.
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Meanwhile, although convicted in court, MacDougall had become a hero to many
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dish owners and satellite TV dealers. A group calling itself the Captain
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Midnight Grassroots Coalition had formed and was selling bumper stickers,
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T-shirts, visors, and sweat bands to raise money for MacDougall's legal costs.
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Said Donald Cochran, spokesman for the coalition: "While there are those who
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consider Captain Midnight a criminal for his unauthorized transmissions, there
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is another group made up of home satellite dish owners, small business people,
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and rebels, who support his actions as a non-violent and non-destructive
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protest in the best American tradition."
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THE RIGHT REASONS
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MacDougall says he has had no direct involvement with the coalition, but he
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adds, "I would like to see my own industry support me in this. Even though I
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may have done more harm than good, as some people think, I did it for the right
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reasons."
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Central Florida Teleport owner Eagan, on the other hand, says that local
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opinion in Ocala and surrounding Marion County has gotten "silly." When the
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coalition presented MacDougall with its first donation, a check for $500, in
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September, a crowd gathered outside his office, and drivers of passing cars and
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pickup trucks honked their horns. Says Eagan, "There's a group of people here
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who think that John MacDougall is a wonderful man and a great hero who has done
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wonderful things for them. But to me, that has not been placed in the
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perspective of the world view or even the regional view. Ninety-nine and nine
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tenths [percent] of the people don't agree."
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Eagan says the only positive thing to come out of the incident was that
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MacDougall was in the home dish business and so there was at least a reason for
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him to have done it. "If it had been some crackpot who did it just for the
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hell of it, or an employee being vindictive, then the corporate community would
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have been more upset. This way they can say, 'We're not the target, HBO was.'"
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Still, the FCC is stepping up security. It has moved to require that by the
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end of 1987 every radio and television transmitter must use an electronic name
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tag whenever it is on the air. Each satellite uplink station would leave a
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unique, unchangeable electronic signature whenever it was used. Also, a bill
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is being drafted in Congress that would raise the penalty for satellite
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interference to a $250,000 fine and/or 10 years in jail.
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SCRAMBLING A REALITY
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HBO's Levy says that now that scrambling is a reality, he believes consumers
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are dropping their emotional resistance to it. "We were the first ones to
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scramble," he says. "We got the arrows in the back and we were the ones to get
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jammed. We're over the first hurdle. HBO wants its products in every home in
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America. We are attempting to increase our business through home dish owners.
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We're calling for the marketplace to set the price. It wouldn't make sense for
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HBO to stifle its growth.
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MacDougall says he never contested the right of HBO and other programmers to
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make a profit from their programs, nor did he object to their right to protect
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those profits by scrambling signals. "My real concern is that the free and
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competitive marketplace be allowed to operate for the benefit of the American
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people," he says. Now, he believes that the last line of Captain Midnight's
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message [Showtime/Movie Channel Beware!] was misunderstood and got him into a
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lot of trouble. "It was a bad choice of words on my part," he says. "I was
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just trying to tell them: "Look before you leap. Don't follow HBO as the
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leader.'"
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It was, he says, the act of a frustrated individual who was trying to get his
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point across to people who didn't seem to listen. He hopes no one will try to
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imitate what he did: "The message is now out; there's no reason to do it
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again."
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MacDougall was born in Elmhurst, Illinois, just outside Chicago. His mother,
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Thelma is a homemaker, and his father, Robert, was a successful building
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contractor, who retired when MacDougall was 9. The youngest of three brothers
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and one sister, MacDougall moved to Florida with his family shortly after his
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father's retirement at the age of 47. MacDougall speaks often of his father.
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Although his entire family supported him after the HBO incident, he says, "My
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father is of the old school, a very staunch conservative: the law is the law,
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and it should never be broken."
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WAS IT WORTH IT?
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MacDougall says he doesn't know now if playing Captain Midnight was worth it
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all: "I might be able to better answer that in a couple of months." He intends
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to write a book about the incident and plans to continue holding on with his
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satellite TV business in Ocala. He says that like many small businessmen, he
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didn't start off with enough money, although he did turn a profit in his first
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year. "I'm losing money now and a good businessman doesn't lose money," he
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admits. "I didn't buy expensive food. I bought cheap gas for my car. I cut
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everything I could and I'm still losing. Now, I can barely plan a month ahead
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because of the volatile changes in the business. You never know what's going
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to happen the next day."
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MacDougall believes in himself, although he says he's not a great salesman.
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He lost his job at the Central Florida Teleport before he was revealed as
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Captain Midnight, because People's Choice went off the air. But all the
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publicity has resulted in more repair business from dish owners, and he says
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manufacturers return his calls quicker now. "There's a certain pride that goes
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into my systems," he says. "I sell a part of myself with each system."
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For all his public declarations of regret, there is also an undeniable pride
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in having pulled off the notorious HBO raid. "Did I know it would work?" asks
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Captain Midnight.
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"DEFINITELY!"
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Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Jeff Hunter 510-935-5845
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Rat Head Ratsnatcher 510-524-3649
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408-363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 415-567-7043
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 415-583-4102
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Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
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arcane knowledge, political extremism, diversive sexuality,
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insane speculation, and wild rumours. ALL-TEXT BBS SYSTEMS.
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Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
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where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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