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Computer underground Digest Fri, Jan 29, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 04
|
||
|
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Moderators: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Associate Moderator: Etiam Shrdlu
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CONTENTS, #4.04 ( Jan 29, 1992)
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||
File 1: Media Watch (Moderators)
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||
File 2: User Bill of Rights Introduced
|
||
File 3: The Casolaro Murder--The Feds' Theft of Inslaw Software
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||
File 4: PRA and Owens Bill
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||
File 5: EFF on PRA/Owen bills
|
||
File 6: PRA/Owens Bill (response to EFF response)
|
||
File 7: Re: CuD 402--Law Enforcement, the Government & You
|
||
File 8: The Harsh Reality of Life
|
||
File 9: Len Rose seeks Unix work upon release
|
||
|
||
Issues of CuD can be found in the Usenet alt.society.cu-digest news
|
||
group, on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of LAWSIG,
|
||
and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM, on Genie, on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414)
|
||
789-4210, and by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.widener.edu (147.31.254.132),
|
||
chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu, and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au. To use the U. of
|
||
Chicago email server, send mail with the subject "help" (without the
|
||
quotes) to archive-server@chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu.
|
||
|
||
COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
|
||
information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
||
diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted as long as the source
|
||
is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
|
||
be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
|
||
mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
|
||
Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to the
|
||
Computer Underground. Articles are preferred to short responses.
|
||
Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely necessary.
|
||
|
||
DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
||
the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
|
||
responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
||
violate copyright protections.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
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Date: Thu, 27 Jan 92 18:32:10
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From: Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
|
||
Subject: File 1--Media Watch (Moderators)
|
||
|
||
BOARDWATCH: The Jan/Feb issue of _Boardwatch_ technical information of
|
||
interest to BBS hobbyists and modemers with legal news and general
|
||
information useful to students of cyberspace. For law buffs, three
|
||
stories (Virginia telecom vs. Virginia BBSs, the American On-Line
|
||
pornography case, and Lance Rose's piece on Whistleblowers' BBS)
|
||
provide a concise summaries of legal issues. The issue also includes
|
||
a BBS listing of boards in Denver and in what used to be East Germany.
|
||
Although $36 a year for 12 issues, it's a great bargain and an
|
||
invaluable resource. For info, contact jrickard@boardwatch.com
|
||
|
||
PHRACK: The latest (Jan '92) "Diet Phrack" (#36) is out, and is the
|
||
best issue since Knight Lightning left two years ago. The issue can
|
||
be obtained from the CuD ftp archive site (see header, above) or by
|
||
contacting the PHRACK editors directly (see CuD #4.02 for details).
|
||
Table of Contents for Phrack 36:
|
||
|
||
1. Introduction to Diet Phrack (Phrack 36) by Compaq Disk and Dr. Dude
|
||
2. Diet Phrack Loopback by Phrack Staff
|
||
3. In Living Computer starring Knight Lightning
|
||
4. The History ah MOD by Wing Ding
|
||
5. *ELITE* Access by Dead Lord and Lord Digital (Lords Anonymous!)
|
||
6. The Legion of Doom & The Occult by Legion of Doom and Demon Seed Elite
|
||
7. Searching for speciAl acceSs agentS by Dr. Dude
|
||
8. Phreaks in Verse II by Homey the Hacker
|
||
9. Real Cyberpunks by The Men from Mongo
|
||
10. Elite World News by Dr. Dude
|
||
11. Elite World News by Dr. Dude
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, 27 Jan 1992 11:07:44 -0500
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From: Craig Neidorf <knight@EFF.ORG>
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Subject: File 2--User Bill of Rights Introduced
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USER "BILL OF RIGHTS" INTRODUCED January 23, 1992
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TAMPA, FLORIDA.-- .The North American Directory Forum (NADF)
|
||
introduced a "User Bill of Rights" to address security and privacy
|
||
issues regarding entries and listings concerning its proposed
|
||
cooperative public directory service. NADF members also approved
|
||
continuing efforts on an experimental publish directory pilot at their
|
||
eighth quarterly meeting.
|
||
|
||
The "User Bill of Rights" addresses the concerns of the individual
|
||
user or the user's agent, and is in response to issues brought to the
|
||
attention of the NADF.
|
||
|
||
Final plans were completed for the X.500 directory pilot scheduled to
|
||
begin in the first quarter of this year. The pilot will be used by
|
||
the NADF to validate its technical agreements for providing a publish
|
||
directory service in North America. The agreements have been recorded
|
||
in standing documents and include the services that will be provided,
|
||
the directory schema and information sharing required to unify the
|
||
directory. It will test the operation of X.500 in a large-scale,
|
||
multi-vendor environment.
|
||
|
||
All NADF members are participating in the pilot. The members are
|
||
AT&T, Bell Atlantic, BellSouth Advanced Networks, Bellcore
|
||
representing US West, BT North America, GE Information Services, IBM,
|
||
Infonet, MCI Communications Corp., Pacific Bell, Performance Systems
|
||
International, US Postal Service and Ziff Communications Co. Joining
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||
the NADF at this meeting are Canada Post Corporation and DirectoryNet,
|
||
Inc.
|
||
|
||
The NADF was founded in 1990 with the goal of bringing together major
|
||
messaging providers in the U.S. and Canada to establish a public
|
||
directory service based on X.500, the CCITT recommendation for a
|
||
global directory service. The forum meets quarterly in a
|
||
collaborative effort to address operational, commercial and technical
|
||
issues involved in implementing a North American directory with the
|
||
objective of expediting the industry's transition to a global X.500
|
||
directory.
|
||
|
||
This quarter's meeting was hosted by the IBM Information Network,
|
||
IBM's value-added services network that provides networking,
|
||
messaging, capacity and consulting services.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
USER BILL OF RIGHTS (for entries and listings in the Public Directory)
|
||
|
||
The mission of the North American Directory Forum is to provide
|
||
interconnected electronic directories which empower users with
|
||
unprecedented access to public information. To address significant
|
||
security and privacy issues, the North American Directory Forum
|
||
introduces the following "User Bill of Rights" for entries in the
|
||
Public Directory. As a user, you have:
|
||
|
||
I. The right not to be listed.
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||
II. The right to have you or your agent informed when your entry is created.
|
||
III. The right to examine your entry.
|
||
IV. The right to correct inaccurate information in your entry.
|
||
V. The right to remove specific information from your entry.
|
||
VI. The right to be assured that your listing in the Public Directory will
|
||
comply with US or Canadian law regulating privacy or access information.
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||
VII. The right to expect timely fulfillment of these rights.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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|
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Scope of Intent - User Bill of Rights
|
||
|
||
The North American Directory Forum is a collection of service
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||
providers that plan to offer a cooperative directory service in North
|
||
America. This is achieved by interconnecting electronic directories
|
||
using a set of internationally developed standards known as the CCITT
|
||
X.500 series.
|
||
|
||
In this context, the "Directory" represents the collection of
|
||
electronic directories administered by both service providers and
|
||
private operators. When an entry containing information about a user
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||
is listed in the Directory, that information can be accessed unless
|
||
restricted by security and privacy controls.
|
||
|
||
A portion of the Directory -- The Public Directory -- contains
|
||
information for public dissemination. In contrast, other portions of
|
||
the Directory may contain information not intended for public access.
|
||
A user or user's agent may elect to list information in the Public
|
||
Directory, a private directory, or some combination. For example, a
|
||
user might publicly list a telephone number or an electronic mail
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||
address, and might designate other information for specific private
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||
use.
|
||
|
||
The User Bill of Rights pertains to the Public Directory.
|
||
Source: NADF, January 1992
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||
|
||
------------------------------
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||
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||
Date: Thu, 16 Jan 1992 21:29:00 LCL
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||
From: sender@garbled.by.new.batch.program
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||
Subject: File 3--The Casolaro Murder--The Feds' Theft of Inslaw Software
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|
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((Moderators' note: The following excerpts from a WBAI-FM interview
|
||
were sent to us by a reader whose header was maliciously garbled by an
|
||
experimental editing program. Our new associate moderator, Etiam
|
||
Shrdlu, assumes full responsibility and apologizes. The poster
|
||
indicated that the interview originally appeared on Activist-L bitnet
|
||
hotline. Background information on the Inslaw case, in which the U.S.
|
||
government is suspected by some of conspiring to steal software and
|
||
cover up its theft, see CuDs 3.30, 3.31, and 3.33)).
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||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=
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||
|
||
The following interview was broadcast over Pacifica Radio Network station
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||
WBAI-FM
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||
505 Eighth Ave., 19th Fl.
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||
New York, NY 10018 (212) 279-0707
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||
|
||
on September 29, 1991.
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||
|
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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SAMORI MARKSMAN:
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||
We go to our next guest, Harry Martin, who is the publisher of
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||
the Napa Sentinel [Napa, California] and who has been doing an
|
||
extraordinary amount of investigatory work around the Inslaw affair.
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||
We will begin by welcoming Harry Martin back to WBAI. Good morning.
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||
Just to let you know that I'm in the studio with Paul DeRienzo.
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||
.....
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||
[deleted some previously discussed information]
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HARRY MARTIN:
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||
The person who is awaiting criminal prosecution is Michael
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||
Riconosciuto, of course. But mind you, he was not arrested at the time
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||
he made the deposition. He gave a deposition to Congress, and he
|
||
indicated to the committee that if he went ahead and testified --as he
|
||
did -- therefore, he would be subject to arrest within a short period
|
||
of time. Within seven days he was arrested! But Ari Ben-Menashe is
|
||
certainly not under any criminal arrest. He is a member of the Israeli
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||
Mossad [intelligence agency]. And the other people who have come
|
||
forward and testified to these various things are not in jail. Michael
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Riconosciuto is a man who has signed an affidavit, and yes, he is in
|
||
jail awaiting criminal charges of supposedly owning a methamphetamine
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||
lab in Pearce Conty, Washington. However, after he was arrested --
|
||
while I was on a Seattle radio show, I was on hold and the news came
|
||
on -- there were three methamphetamine labs broken up in Pearce
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||
County, Washington, not associated with him whatsoever. And it would
|
||
lead to the suspicion that perhaps they were all connected to one
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||
thing and had nothing to do with Michael, but they decided to hang one
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||
on him right after his testimony.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
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||
Why don't you give us some background on who Ari Ben-Menashe is,
|
||
because his name has come up on a number of different issues.
|
||
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||
HARRY MARTIN:
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||
His name has turned up on the October Surprise and everything else.
|
||
He is a member of the Mossad and he apparently indicates that he is a
|
||
witness to the exchange of the PROMIS software to the Iraqis in
|
||
Santiago, Chile. Now there was also a British Air Force officer who
|
||
was a witness to that thing, supposedly, and he was hung. And they
|
||
declared that to be suicide. That was in Chile. Ben-Menashe has come
|
||
forward on a lot of things, but you have to understand that the
|
||
Israelis, at the present time, are also very irritated with the Bush
|
||
Administration. And you cannot be sure how much information and
|
||
disinformation is being passed around.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
How about Mr. Riconosciuto? We discussed the legal problems he got
|
||
himself in after he spoke out. But what is his history?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
He's a very brilliant computer scientist. He has worked inside the CIA
|
||
for a long time. And nobody can deny this fact. Nobody is challenging
|
||
that particular role. He was the man who had the access keys to almost
|
||
any computer situation: monies, who's who and everything else. He's
|
||
very dangerous in the aspect that he has all that knowledge of the key
|
||
players in many, many things. And, of course, his affidavit stated
|
||
that he converted the PROMIS software using the Cabazon Indian
|
||
reservation, in Indio, California to do this. And Dr. Earl Brian was
|
||
very much involved there. That place was also used for the manufacture
|
||
of biological warfare and chemical warfare to be used by the Contras
|
||
in Nicaragua. Testimony has come forward from many people that that
|
||
whole Indian tribe and those people running it are shown by the
|
||
California Department of Justice to have Mafia and CIA ties. This is
|
||
a documented situation. But jurisdiction becomes a problem because it
|
||
is an independent Indian nation.
|
||
|
||
.....
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
We have reports that have come out in COMPUTERWORLD and other sources
|
||
based on these statements made by Mr. Ben-Menashe and Mr. Riconosciuto
|
||
that Robert McFarlane, who was the former National Security Advisor,
|
||
was involved in giving the Israeli Government copies of this software.
|
||
Bill Hamilton says that he found out, quite by accident, that Canada
|
||
was using it widely; that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were using
|
||
it in their intelligence facilities.
|
||
|
||
.....
|
||
|
||
Now, what was the role of the Indian reservation?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Well, there are several Indian reservations that are being used by the
|
||
Wackenhut Corporation and intelligence agencies to do things like
|
||
manufacture equipment or ..... They can skip a lot of corners because
|
||
these nations are technically independent. For instance, one
|
||
reservation is in New Mexico, but it also goes across the Mexican
|
||
border. Therefore, it becomes an open corridor where you don't use
|
||
customs or anything because part of your properties are in one country
|
||
and part is in another. And they have used these Indian tribes for
|
||
everything from the manufacture of weapons to the software situation,
|
||
opening up gambling casinos. And understand, a lot of the money
|
||
involved in the savings and loan scandal came from the Bureau of
|
||
Indian Affairs. The Bureau of Indian Affairs puts out money to be
|
||
invested on short-term notices, and this is how a lot of the savings
|
||
and loans that went down started up. And that's where a lot of their
|
||
money came from.
|
||
|
||
There could be a lot of inter-ties in there. It is so complex, and of
|
||
course, Danny Casolaro referred to it as "the Octopus". You can
|
||
understand why now, because it gets into .... You see, the trouble is,
|
||
you can't isolate Inslaw by itself. Inslaw by itself is just a minor
|
||
thing compared with the overall package. The total corruption that
|
||
seems to have played around --Iran/Contra gets involved, and the
|
||
October Surprise gets involved. There are just so many players that
|
||
keep coming across each other, and it's a really massive story. I
|
||
don't know anybody who is going to get the whole picture.
|
||
|
||
........
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
What I'm trying to get at are the connections that might lead to
|
||
an investigation, or try to force an investigation into these
|
||
things because it seems that when you have a reporter who is
|
||
found dead under mysterious circumstances, by anybody's definition,
|
||
it deserves being looked into further rather than a simple ruling
|
||
that this was a suicide because .....
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
You have to understand now, Inslaw was sort of on the back burner of
|
||
the public limelight. In other words, I'm getting letters now from
|
||
your program last week in which people say they haven't heard too
|
||
much about this thing on the East Coast. Originally, Inslaw was
|
||
carried by the Washington Times, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and
|
||
ourselves. And we're the only three newspapers in the whole nation
|
||
giving any credence or concentration to it.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
Actually, Barron's also.
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
The Sam Nunn Committee got nowhere because the Justice Department
|
||
refused to turn over any records whatsoever. And Jack Brooks's
|
||
Committee, which is in our Congress, has already had some hearings
|
||
and some of the testimony is from Judge Bason and so forth. But
|
||
again, the Justice Department is stonewalling it in refusing to
|
||
give documentation up. And, of course, my question is: Who's in
|
||
control, the Congress or the Justice Department? The thing is
|
||
that the death of Danny Casolaro has opened this to the fact that
|
||
you're seeing more and more questions asking: What is this Inslaw
|
||
case? And that in itself is going to open up more questions into
|
||
other things. See, if they open up the Inslaw case, it's just
|
||
going to be the tip of the iceberg, and they may find a lot of
|
||
other things involved and interconnected. Perhaps Danny's death
|
||
is going to give more impetus to the Brooks Committee. It's
|
||
certainly beginning to wake up the national media which really
|
||
slept on this thing. These things take time. Look how long it took
|
||
Watergate. And Iran/Contra really never got anywhere.
|
||
|
||
SAMORI MARKSMAN:
|
||
We want to let our listeners know that we are speaking with
|
||
Harry Martin who is the publisher of the Napa Sentinel, and as
|
||
you've been hearing, we're focusing on a rather intriguing story --
|
||
which involves some major players in the political affairs of
|
||
this society -- but which isn't receiving the kind of attention
|
||
that the issue deserves. We here at WBAI are attempting to do so
|
||
today and we will continue to do so.
|
||
.....
|
||
Paul, I want to ask Harry to go back to a point which he alluded
|
||
to earlier. We had been talking about the breadth of this issue,
|
||
that it's not simply the disappearance of Danny, that there are
|
||
many others who have been killed in similarly mysterious
|
||
circumstances, although some perhaps less mysteriously than others.
|
||
Could you discuss that again for us, Harry Martin, and show what
|
||
was a common thread linking these various deaths?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Well, much of the common thread is Danny Casolaro himself. We have
|
||
Standorf, who worked for a secret [government] communications
|
||
division outside of Washington [D.C.]. He was funneling documents
|
||
to Danny at all times, and he was found beaten to death in his car
|
||
at National Airport in Washington. And of course, Danny indicated
|
||
that his sources had [since] dried up. Apparently, they had set up
|
||
a thing in the Hilton Hotel, in room 900, in which they had
|
||
high-speed equipment, and they were duplicating everything as
|
||
quickly as possible to get them back in [returned to] the files.
|
||
|
||
Then of course, we have Mr. Ng who was in Guatemala. He worked
|
||
for the Financial Times of London. He was working on this case,
|
||
but he was also working on the Wackenhut Corporation and following
|
||
a key witness to the murders of some Cabazon Indians. And he was
|
||
found shot to death in Guatemala.
|
||
|
||
And then, of course, Michael Riconosciuto's attorney -- Eiselman,
|
||
I think it is. I don't have my notes in front of me -- from
|
||
Philadelphia, was en route to pick up material proving that
|
||
Riconosciuto was, in fact, telling the truth. And he was found
|
||
shot to death.
|
||
|
||
All these things, with the exception of Standorf, were written off
|
||
as suicides. And Michael May, who we wrote of as being tied into
|
||
that, and who had had communications with Casolaro .... and also,
|
||
he was the man who supposedly filtered the forty million dollars
|
||
to the Iranians as the down payment on the "October Surprise" --
|
||
we wrote about him on a Friday in June, and on a Wednesday in
|
||
San Francisco he was found dead. They said it was a heart attack.
|
||
Later on, the autopsy revealed that it was polypharmaceuticals
|
||
that were in his system, and it was not a heart attack.
|
||
|
||
Michael Riconosciuto's arrest, of course .... It would take me
|
||
forever to explain them all, but that gives you a synopsis of
|
||
some of the things that have happened to people associated with
|
||
that particular case.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
Let's concentrate on one of the more outrageous of these murders.
|
||
And that, besides Casolaro's death (many people, including
|
||
Bill Hamilton call that a murder) ....
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
We refer to them as deaths. We're not taking the total line yet
|
||
that they were murders.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
There is conflict on these [deaths], but they are very suspicious.
|
||
One actual murder that nobody will deny was that of Mr. Alvarez,
|
||
the crusading member of the Cabazon Indians who opposed the ....
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Absolutely! And he was shot with two other people, execution style.
|
||
Jimmy Hughes was a man who worked for Wackenhut and who was the
|
||
bag-man to bring the money over [to pay for the contract murders
|
||
of Fred Alvarez and company]. And he has testified to the
|
||
Riverside County [California] District Attorney's office. He is
|
||
now in hiding in Guatemala, of course. That's where Mr. Ng
|
||
was down to see him. He also carried a lot of other information
|
||
which was extremely damaging. We were able to talk to people who
|
||
helped him escape, because he came up this way at first, and now
|
||
he's down in Guatemala. The Indian situation itself is its own
|
||
scandal. Then there's the Wackenhut Corporation, and you get
|
||
into Inslaw .... Like I say, its just so wide you would need a
|
||
massive computer just to do a chart.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
Can we focus now on Alvarez? Can you tell us that story?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Alvarez was basically the head of the Cabazon Indians, and when
|
||
Wackenhut and Dr. Brian and people came in to take over and create
|
||
the gambling parlors and to convert the Inslaw software and to
|
||
manufacture chemical warfare weapons and so forth, he protested.
|
||
He wanted control of the Indian tribe back. And he was summarily
|
||
executed. The money came from the people who were running that,
|
||
according to the testimony of Jimmy Hughes, which is on file with
|
||
the State of California in the Riverside County D.A.'s office.
|
||
Incidentally now, after all these years they have finally reopened
|
||
that case in Riverside because of the publicity associated with
|
||
the Inslaw case.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
At first, there was a grand jury investigation and there were no
|
||
indictments or suspects mentioned in that first investigation.
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
And yet, Hughes testified to names, places, events, everything.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
Mr. John P. Nichols, who was at that time the head of the tribe
|
||
and who now is an advisor to the Cabazon Indians, said that the
|
||
death of Mr. Alvarez and two non-Indian companions, who were found
|
||
shot to death with him, had nothing to do with what's going on in
|
||
the Cabazon reservation.
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Yet, Jimmy Hughes has testified to the Riverside people that
|
||
John Nichols is the one who gave him the money to deliver to the
|
||
hit-man in Palm Springs. Also, Mr. John Nichols was later on
|
||
convicted for murder-for-hire and his sons are now technically
|
||
running the tribe.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
He was actually convicted rather than charged? I heard he was
|
||
brought up on charges. But he was actually convicted of that?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Absolutely.
|
||
|
||
PAUL DeRIENZO:
|
||
But Mr. Nichols seems to have a tremendous amount of support.
|
||
From what I understand, he's getting a lot of support from
|
||
liberal figures such as James Aboureszk, the former senator from
|
||
South Dakota.
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
You have to understand, Mr. Nichols, by his own boasting and
|
||
through other publications, indicates that he was involved in
|
||
the assassination of [democratically elected President of Chile,
|
||
Salvador] Allende, and he was involved in the attempted
|
||
assassination of [Cuban Premier Fidel] Castro. His links as a
|
||
C.I.A. contractor -- his links with the Mafia are well documented
|
||
with the State of California. Therefore, obviously he's going to
|
||
get some support from groups that are probably within that channel.
|
||
|
||
.....
|
||
|
||
SAMORI MARKSMAN:
|
||
Harry Martin, we'd like to thank you very much for joining us
|
||
again here on WBAI. Any closing points that you would like to make?
|
||
|
||
HARRY MARTIN:
|
||
Well, just that Danny's concept of an "Octopus" .... you can see
|
||
exactly what he was talking about. The tentacles went everywhere,
|
||
and he seemed to be on the verge of breaking a lot of that
|
||
information. And then all of his records, everything disappeared.
|
||
And he died. To say that a journalist would commit suicide when
|
||
he's on the verge of breaking a big story is ludicrous because
|
||
anybody knowing a journalist knows that once they are on a drive,
|
||
neither food nor anything else matters but to get that story
|
||
across. He was very close to it, and you don't cash in the chips
|
||
on the verge of winning the jackpot.
|
||
|
||
SAMORI MARKSMAN:
|
||
So true. Harry Martin, publisher of the Napa [California] Sentinel,
|
||
thank you very much for joining us here on WBAI, non-commercial,
|
||
listener-sponsored Pacifica Radio at 99.5 FM in New York.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sun, 26 Jan 1992 11:44:21 CST
|
||
From: Cayman Zahn <CZA@CAMP1.SYSONE.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 4--PRA and Owens Bill
|
||
|
||
((Your readers might be interested in the following that came
|
||
across the nets))
|
||
|
||
++++ Original Message ++++
|
||
|
||
>Date: Thu, 23 Jan 1992 16:23:42 EST
|
||
>From: James P Love<LOVE@PUCC.BITNET>
|
||
>Subject: PRA and Owens Bill
|
||
|
||
A number of persons have asked me how the Owens Bill (HR 3459) and the
|
||
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) relate to each other. From our point of
|
||
view, they represent competing approaches to federal information
|
||
policy. Not only do these bills accomplish different things, but it
|
||
is highly unlikely that both bills will be acted on by Congress.
|
||
|
||
THE PRA
|
||
|
||
The sections of the PRA that deal with the dissemination of government
|
||
information largely reflect IIA's vision of federal information
|
||
policy.
|
||
|
||
1. Agency mandates to disseminate information are qualified by the
|
||
existence of private sector "equivalent" products and services.
|
||
|
||
2. The law limits agency prices for information "products," which
|
||
vendors buy, but not "services," which would include such things
|
||
as online access to government information systems.
|
||
|
||
3. While the PRA would benefit data users and vendors by prohibiting
|
||
royalties on government information, it may also prohibit
|
||
agencies from limiting the prices vendors charge for access to
|
||
services such as CENDATA or the FEC database.
|
||
|
||
4. The PRA only requires public notice when agencies start or
|
||
terminate "significant" new information products and services.
|
||
These are when privatization issues are important. There are no
|
||
provisions for public notice to review an existing policy to see
|
||
if it is adequate in light of changing technologies, or to raise
|
||
hundreds of user concerns over things like standards for file
|
||
formats, query command structures, user interfaces, indexes or
|
||
other important features of information dissemination programs.
|
||
|
||
5. The PRA strengthens OMB's role in setting federal information
|
||
policy. OMB has a long record of promoting the privatization of
|
||
federal information resources.
|
||
|
||
THE OWENS BILL
|
||
|
||
The Owens bill was drafted from the point of view of data users.
|
||
|
||
1. Agency have an unambiguous mandate to disseminate information
|
||
using modern technologies. Not only is the intent as expressed
|
||
in the findings quite good, but the bill specifically mentions
|
||
such things as the use of national computer networks.
|
||
|
||
2. Agency prices are limited for goods _and_ services.
|
||
|
||
3. The Owens bill bans agency royalties or fees for the
|
||
redissemination of information, but it doesn't place other
|
||
restrictions on federal agencies.
|
||
|
||
4. The public notice sections of the Owens bill are extensive, and
|
||
they address, on an annual basis, issues such as standards for
|
||
file formats, query command structures, user interfaces, and
|
||
indexes, as well as agency product lines, prices, outlets, and a
|
||
number of other things.
|
||
|
||
5. OMB will be constrained by the Owens bill, since the bill
|
||
carefully sets out agency mandates to disseminate information,
|
||
but OMB isn't given powers to make federal information policy.
|
||
NIST and NARA are asked to become more involved in federal
|
||
information policy.
|
||
|
||
POLITICS OF THE TWO BILLS
|
||
|
||
1. IIA wants a bill that addresses the pricing of government
|
||
information. Vendors are disturbed by the recent attempts to
|
||
place royalties on the redisseminate of ocean tariff information.
|
||
Both bills would address this issue.
|
||
|
||
2. The IIA has told its membership that the Owens bill is consistent
|
||
with IIA principles.
|
||
|
||
3. The PRA probably can't pass without the support of the library
|
||
community.
|
||
|
||
4. IIA is asking the library community to cut a deal on the PRA.
|
||
|
||
5. The PRA is a political tar baby, because it gets into many
|
||
unrelated subjects, such as OMB's authority to review agency
|
||
regulations before they are published, or the authority of
|
||
agencies to require firms to disclose health warnings to third
|
||
parties. The heavy hitters in those disputes don't care about
|
||
the information dissemination parts of the bill, and federal
|
||
information policy ends up being lost in the public debates.
|
||
|
||
We have opposed the passage of the PRA and we have supported the
|
||
passage of the Owens bill. We don't think OMB has much to recommend
|
||
it as a maker of federal information policy. If you disagree, ask
|
||
yourself this questions: Who else in the federal government would
|
||
want OMB to set policy? Do education groups want OMB to set education
|
||
policy? Do scientists want OMB to set science policy? OMB is
|
||
primarily staffed by accounting and management types who have little
|
||
background or commitment to the development and use information
|
||
resources or technologies. Why put them in the drivers seat?
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
James Love, Director VOICE: 609-683-0534
|
||
Taxpayer Assets Project FAX: 202-234-5176
|
||
7-Z Magie, Faculty Road bitnet: Love@pucc.bitnet
|
||
Princeton, NJ 08540 internet: Love@pucc.princeton.edu
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, 25 Jan 1992 15:29:46 EST
|
||
From: Bennett Crook <BCROOK@WAYNEST1.BITNET>
|
||
Subject: File 5--EFF on PRA/Owen bills
|
||
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Original message++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
The Electronic Frontier Foundation strongly disagrees with the Jamie
|
||
Love/Taxpayer Assets project interpretation of the Paperwork Reduction
|
||
Act Information Dissemination Sections. We support PRA. It is not
|
||
perfect legislation but it embodies postive obligation of goverment
|
||
agencies to disseminate public information in all formats and supports
|
||
a diversity of information sources.
|
||
|
||
Make no mistake. The TAP/Love Approach sometimes appears to envision
|
||
the government as the sole producer of government information.This is
|
||
inconsistent with free flow of information, diversity of sources for
|
||
government originated information.We dont want goverment to monopolize
|
||
info as we do not want private sector to do the same.
|
||
|
||
EFF, ACLU, OMB Watch, support PRA.
|
||
|
||
But we also support OWENS BILL!!!! Problem is that owens does little
|
||
except require agencies to report on dissemination activities. Good.
|
||
But also amends FOIA (Freedom of Info Act) which is fine but not easy
|
||
and cannot be considered independent of S 1939, Leahy (DVT, SEn) bill
|
||
to create Electronic Freedom of Information Act. PRA is in public
|
||
interest. Owens is in public interest. Electronic Foia in public
|
||
interest. Lets support them all.
|
||
|
||
J. Berman, EFF Wash Office Director.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Tue, 28 Jan 1992 14:20:09 EST
|
||
From: James P Love <LOVE@PUCC.BITNET>
|
||
Subject: File 6--PRA/Owens Bill (response to EFF response)
|
||
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Original message++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
January 27, 1992
|
||
|
||
Jerry Berman
|
||
Director, Washington Office,
|
||
EFF
|
||
666 Pennsylvania Avenue, SE
|
||
Suite 303
|
||
Washington, DC 20003
|
||
|
||
RE: PRA/Owens Bill
|
||
|
||
Dear Jerry:
|
||
|
||
Here are my suggestions regarding the principles that should
|
||
prevail in a PRA (and/or) Owens bill.
|
||
|
||
1. Agencies should have an unambiguous mandate to provide
|
||
access to federal information in a variety of formats and
|
||
modes. The agencies should make reasonable efforts to
|
||
respond to requests for access to data stored in electronic
|
||
formats. This should include requests that data be
|
||
disseminated in ways that make it convenient to receive and
|
||
use (i.e. floppy disks, CD-ROMs, standardized record
|
||
structures).
|
||
|
||
2. Agencies should have a clear mandate to provide online
|
||
access to government information, and to use computer
|
||
networks, such as the Internet, for dissemination.
|
||
|
||
3. Agencies should provide information products and services to
|
||
the federal depository library program.
|
||
|
||
4. The agency should provide access to underlying records of
|
||
databases, as well as to value added services, including
|
||
those that are developed for use by government employees.
|
||
|
||
5. The agency's mandate to disseminate information should not
|
||
evaporate simply because there are private sector
|
||
alternatives. (i.e. the PRA "check list").
|
||
|
||
6. The government should charge no more than the incremental
|
||
cost of dissemination for information products _and_
|
||
services.
|
||
|
||
7. Agencies should be encouraged to embrace standards for such
|
||
things as record formats and query commands.
|
||
|
||
8. The public should have frequent and regular opportunities to
|
||
review agency policies and practices and offer criticisms.
|
||
Agencies should be required to say what they have done about
|
||
those criticisms.
|
||
|
||
9. The legislation should not enhance OMB's role in setting
|
||
federal information policy. 11 years of ORIA work in this
|
||
area should be enough to convince anyone that OMB is a
|
||
terrible choice for this role.
|
||
|
||
10. The legislation should not become embroiled with battles
|
||
over OMB's powers to review federal regulations or the
|
||
federal government's authority to require firms to post
|
||
health and safety notices. These are important issues, but
|
||
when the legislation embraces these issues no one pays any
|
||
attention to the information dissemination issues. Federal
|
||
information policy is too important to be decided in an
|
||
environment where every move is determined by players who do
|
||
not care or know about information policy issues.
|
||
|
||
In my mind, the Owens bill addresses these issues better than the
|
||
PRA. Perhaps it is possible to incorporate features of the Owens
|
||
Bill in the PRA legislation, while avoiding the negative baggage
|
||
that the Paperwork Reduction Act carries with it. I'm not
|
||
convinced, but I have an open mind.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: 18 Jan 92 11:55:48 GMT
|
||
From: nick@KRALIZEC.ZETA.ORG.AU(Nick Andrew)
|
||
Subject: File 7--Re: Cud 402--Law Enforcement, the Government & You
|
||
|
||
Jon Pugh <jpugh@APPLE.COM> writes:
|
||
|
||
> If you were assigned to track down computer criminals and you
|
||
>didn't know a bit from a scuzzy disk controller, where would you start
|
||
>looking? On bulletin boards and at computer club meetings, of course.
|
||
|
||
The above statement presupposes that "where there are bulletin boards
|
||
and computer club meetings, there is computer crime". That may be true
|
||
in certain places, however for the general case it is certainly
|
||
incorrect.
|
||
|
||
If I might make an analogy, it is akin to the logic of saying "People
|
||
sometimes smoke Grass. Most people who smoke Grass drive cars.
|
||
Grass-smoking drivers often carry Grass in their cars. So therefore we
|
||
should search a lot of cars at random, in the hope of finding Grass
|
||
smokers."
|
||
|
||
The analogy leads to an undesirable situation - that of law officials
|
||
interfering with people going about their business and searching their
|
||
personal property without any suspicion of wrongdoing. They _hope_ to
|
||
find grass, and they know if they stop 1 car in X, they will find
|
||
some.
|
||
|
||
The situation with computer hobbyists is as undesirable. Nobody wants
|
||
law officials peeping into computer clubs trying to find a hint of
|
||
wrongdoing. The logic is backwards. Firstly find the wrongdoing - the
|
||
crack, or phreaking, then work towards the perpetrator. Not the other
|
||
way around.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, 25 Jan 1992 11:27:32 -0500
|
||
From: Craig Neidorf <kl@STORMKING.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 8--The Harsh Reality of Life
|
||
|
||
THE HARSH REALITY OF LIFE
|
||
|
||
by Craig Neidorf kl@stormking.com
|
||
|
||
January 18-19, 1992 marked the two-year anniversary of my visit from
|
||
and subsequent raid by the United States Secret Service, Southwestern
|
||
Bell Security, and the University of Missouri Police Department.
|
||
|
||
The publicity and attention that once surrounded United States v.
|
||
Craig Neidorf has long been over, and; for most people involved life
|
||
has returned to normal and those events are history.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately things are not quite as simple for me.
|
||
|
||
After my trial concluded, I went back to school at the University of
|
||
Missouri, and hit the books hard. I earned a 4.0 (straight A average)
|
||
that semester, focusing on political science and pre-law courses. I
|
||
did almost as well the following spring and summer semesters. I
|
||
graduated on August 2, 1991.
|
||
|
||
However, my legal bills remained very high. In fact, my parents and I
|
||
still owe close to $50,000.
|
||
|
||
I have always been uncomfortable with the idea of actually making a
|
||
direct appeal to people to send donations in to my defense fund, but
|
||
over the last year and a half, my idealism about the future has faded
|
||
and been replaced with reality.
|
||
|
||
At the end of my trial, my legal fees totaled about $108,000 and this
|
||
figure does not include travel expenses in going back and forth to
|
||
Chicago from St. Louis and Columbia or any other related expenditures
|
||
that I had to make during that 7 month period.
|
||
|
||
- This figure does not include the money I lost by having to drop most
|
||
of my classes at the University of Missouri that semester because I
|
||
could not consistently attend class during my ordeal.
|
||
|
||
- This figure does not reflect the pain and suffering that my family
|
||
and I were put through by a malicious and ignorant prosecutor and
|
||
other similarly unpleasant people at Bellsouth, Illinois Bell,
|
||
Bellcore, and AT&T.
|
||
|
||
- This figure does not include the traumatic incidents of my
|
||
suspension from the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity or the threats of
|
||
expulsion I received from the Chancellor's office of the University
|
||
of Missouri.
|
||
|
||
- And finally this figure does not include the additional $900 I had
|
||
to spend to finally get my arrest records expunged. That fee could
|
||
and should have been avoided altogether except as with the trial,
|
||
William Cook (the assistant U.S. attorney) opposed my motion for
|
||
expungement and so several more motions and court appearances were
|
||
necessary for me to achieve victory.
|
||
|
||
The number one MYTH about my legal fees is that they were paid by the
|
||
Electronic Frontier Foundation. This is complete fiction. Although I
|
||
appeared to have been somewhat of a spokesperson and "poster-child"
|
||
for the EFF throughout 1990 and 1991, and despite what you may have
|
||
read anywhere else, there were no monetary contributions granted to me
|
||
by that organization. NONE. There was a private and very generous
|
||
donation made by Mitch Kapor personally, but this is separate from the
|
||
EFF.
|
||
|
||
EFF did pay for some legal motions to be filed in my case regarding
|
||
the First Amendment, but since these motions were denied, they
|
||
impacted only slightly on the outcome of my trial. The most
|
||
beneficial outcome of the EFF's involvement with my case was the
|
||
general increase in awareness in the community at large to the issues
|
||
my case presented.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
Well more than a year has passed since the day my trial ended...
|
||
|
||
My entire life savings that I had stored for college and law school
|
||
was needed as a downpayment on my legal fees and my parents of course
|
||
had to give up most of their savings as well. A payment plan was
|
||
arranged over what looks to be a 10 year period. We had no choice,
|
||
but to accept that these were the cards life had dealt us and after
|
||
all things could be much worse. I have my health and my freedom (such
|
||
as it is) and such things are worth more than money.
|
||
|
||
However, I am a young person starting out in life. I have applied to
|
||
several law schools across the country, both public and private.
|
||
Unfortunately, after reviewing my financial options, I have discovered
|
||
that the expense of a legal education may now place it very far beyond
|
||
my means.
|
||
|
||
Like a very large number of Americans, the recession has hit home,
|
||
putting my father out of work and keeping my mother in a job beneath
|
||
her talents.
|
||
|
||
It seriously pains me to have to do this, but trust me when I tell you
|
||
that I've thought about this for a long time. I need YOUR HELP to get
|
||
my legal bills paid. I need to be able to live my life without this
|
||
debt hanging over my head. There are at least 343 people on the
|
||
Phrack emailing list alone: If each person only contributed $30 it
|
||
would save me over $10,000. You see helping me out is not beyond the
|
||
reach of our community if we all work together. Consider it an
|
||
investment in your future, because what happened to me can happen to
|
||
anyone and with a legal education I'll be back to return the favor.
|
||
|
||
If you find that you can afford to help me, you have my most sincere
|
||
thanks and appreciation. I know a lot of you are in tight financial
|
||
situations like me and can sympathize with what I am going through.
|
||
If you are unable to help me because you are having problems of your
|
||
own then you have my sympathy as well.
|
||
|
||
Please make checks or money orders payable to: Katten, Muchin, &
|
||
Zavis
|
||
|
||
Send them to: Sheldon Zenner
|
||
Katten, Muchin, & Zavis
|
||
525 West Monroe Street
|
||
Suite 1600
|
||
Chicago, Illinois 60606-3693
|
||
|
||
And do not forget to write my name in the memo section or enclose a
|
||
letter explaining what the check is for. If you neglect to do that,
|
||
KMZ will not credit my account for the amount of the check.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PS - I'd also appreciate any tips or leads on potential sources of
|
||
financial aid, grants, and scholarships available for an aspiring law
|
||
student.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: anonymous@name.deleted
|
||
Subject: File 9--Len Rose seeks Unix work upon release
|
||
Date: 23 Jan 92 06:03:13 GMT
|
||
|
||
((Readers might be interested in the following posted on the nets
|
||
by Mark Hittinger--a.a.))
|
||
|
||
From time to time I've corresponded with Len Rose, mostly trying to
|
||
get him through his bad times and to get him thinking about the future
|
||
in the right way.
|
||
|
||
Time does fly when you are having fun, even the time you make a plea
|
||
bargain for. It is time for Len to start thinking about employment so
|
||
I'm posting an "ad" that Len wrote. Len does not know where in the
|
||
"food chain" he may find himself, so the chance to obtain heavy Unix
|
||
time at a discount exists! Len will very much appreciate any leads or
|
||
offers. He's got two little ones at
|
||
home.
|
||
|
||
Unix work desired.
|
||
Systems administration or general consulting.
|
||
Will be released from Federal prison soon.
|
||
(See Computer Underground Digest Archives or the Electronic Frontier
|
||
Foundation Archives for more details).
|
||
|
||
Extensive experience: System V, AIX (RS/6000), SCO
|
||
Communications: TCP/IP, UUCP, ect.
|
||
'C' programming language.
|
||
Security auditing, general system administration.
|
||
Extensive 'anti-hacker' experience.
|
||
Extensive MS-DOS background.
|
||
Heavy hardware experience including installations from the ground up.
|
||
Willing to travel widely, relocation at your desire, including international.
|
||
|
||
Please send inquiries to:
|
||
|
||
Len Rose/27154-037
|
||
FPC Seymour Johnson AFB
|
||
Caller Box 8004, PMB 187
|
||
Goldsboro, NC 27531-8004
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #4.04
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
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||
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