379 lines
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379 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Fri, 29 Jan 93 16:52:19 PST
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Reply-To: <surfpunk@osc.versant.com>
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Return-Path: <cocot@osc.versant.com>
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Message-ID: <surfpunk-0041@SURFPUNK.Technical.Journal>
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Mime-Version: 1.0
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Content-Type: text/plain
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From: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (fheschax@bfp.irefnag.pbz)
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To: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (SURFPUNK Technical Journal)
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Subject: [surfpunk-0041] Steve Jackson Games/Secret Service Lawsuit
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Keywords: surfpunk, Steve Jackson Games, USSS, Timothy Foley
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+ When the time comes, if I post to the
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+ right newsgroup, ten thousand people
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+ will know within three days.
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+ -- Bjarne Stroustrup
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+ [ I forget the exact numbers --strick]
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Wish I had a radioactive trace on this one, to watch it spread
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around the globe. Thanks to spaf and charlie@rtfm. --strick
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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Newsgroups: alt.bbs,comp.org.eff.news,alt.cyberpunk,austin.important,tx.news
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From: wixer!pacoid@cs.utexas.edu (Paco Xander Nathan)
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Subject: Steve Jackson Games - Day 3
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Organization: Houston Chronicle
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Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1993 11:12:43 GMT
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Steve Jackson Games/Secret Service Lawsuit -- Day One
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By JOE ABERNATHY
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Copyright 1993, Houston Chronicle
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AUSTIN -- Plaintiff's attorneys wrested two embarrassing admissions from the
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United States Secret Service on the opening day of a federal civil lawsuit
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designed to establish the bounds of constitutional protections for electronic
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publishing and electronic mail.
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In the first, Special Agent Timothy Foley of Chicago admitted that crucial
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statements were erroneous in an affidavit he used to conduct several
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search-and-seizure operations in a March 1990 crackdown on computer crime.
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Foley later conceded that the Secret Service's special training for computer
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crime investigators overlooks any mention of the law that regulates the extent
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of permissible search-and-seizures at publishing operations.
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The case, brought by Steve Jackson Games, an Austin firm, is being tried
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before United States District Judge Sam Sparks. Carefully nurtured over the
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course of three years by a group of electronic civil rights activists -- at a
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cost of more than $200,000 -- the case has been eagerly anticipated as a
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possible damper on what is seen as computer crime hysteria among federal
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police.
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Plaintiffs hope to prove that the printed word exists just as surely on the
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computer screen as it does on a sheet of paper. The complaint also seeks to
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establish the right of computer users to congregate electronically on bulletin
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board systems -- such as one called Illuminati that was taken from Steve
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Jackson Games -- and to exchange private electronic mail on such BBSs.
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"This lawsuit is just to stand up and say, at the end of the 20th Century,
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that publishing occurs as much on computers as on the printed page," said Jim
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George, of the Austin firm George, Donaldson & Ford, Jackson's law firm.
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That issue came into sharp focus during George's questioning of Foley
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regarding the seizure of the PC on which Illuminati ran, and another computer
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on which was stored the word processing document containing a pending Steve
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Jackson Games book release, GURPS Cyberpunk.
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"At the Secret Service computer crime school, were you, as the agent in charge
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of this investigation, made aware of special rules for searching a publishing
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company?" George asked Foley. He was referring to the Privacy Protection Act,
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which states that police may not seize a work in progress from a publisher. It
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does not specify what physical form such a work must take.
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"No, sir, I was not," Foley responded.
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"Did you just miss class the day that was taught?" George asked.
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"No, sir. The United States Secret Service does not teach its agents about
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special rules regarding search and seizure at publishing companies," Foley
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said.
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"Let the record clearly show that to be the case," George said.
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Earlier, Foley admitted on the witness stand that his original affidavit
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seeking a judge's approval to raid Steve Jackson Games contained a fundamental
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error.
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During the March 1990 raid -- one of several dozen staged that day around the
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country in an investigation that the Secret Service called Operation Sun Devil
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at the time -- agents were seeking copies of a document taken as a hacker
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trophy from BellSouth. Subsequently republished in an electronic magazine
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called Phrack, thousands of copies of the document were stored on bulletin
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board systems around the nation.
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Neither Jackson nor his company were suspected of wrongdoing, and no charges
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have ever been filed against anyone targeted in several Austin raids. The
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alleged membership of Steve Jackson employee Loyd Blankenship in the Legion of
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Doom hacker's group -- which was believed responsible for the break-in -- led
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agents to raid the Austin game publisher at the same time that Blankenship's
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Austin home was raided.
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Yet the only two paragraphs in the 42-paragraph indictment that established a
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connection between Blankenship's alleged illegal activities and Steve Jackson
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Games were shown to have been erroneously arrived at, when George produced a
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statement by Bellcore expert Henry Kluepfel disputing statements attributed to
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him in Foley's affidavit.
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"Is it true that Mr. Kluepfel logged onto (Illuminati)?" George questioned.
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"No, sir," Foley responded.
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"But you state that in your affidavit," George said.
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"That was a misattribution," Foley said.
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"So you had no knowledge that anything was sent to my client?"
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"No sir, not directly," Foley said.
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"Indirectly?" George asked.
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"No sir."
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The Justice Department, in papers filed with the court, contends that only
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traditional journalistic organizations enjoy the protections of the Privacy
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Protection Act. It further contends that users of electronic mail have no
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reasonable expectation of privacy.
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The trial was to resume at 8:30 a.m. It is expected to conclude on Thursday or
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Friday.
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Steve Jackson Games/Secret Service Trial -- Day Two
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By JOE ABERNATHY
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Copyright 1993, Houston Chronicle
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AUSTIN -- A young woman read aloud a deeply personal friendship letter
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Wednesday in a federal civil lawsuit intended to establish the human dimension
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and constitutional guarantees of electronic assembly and communication.
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Testimony indicated that the letter read by Elizabeth Cayce-McCoy previously
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had been seized, printed and reviewed by the Secret Service.
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Her correspondence was among 162 undelivered personal letters testimony
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indicated were taken by the government in March 1990 during a raid on Steve
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Jackson Games, which ran an electronic bulletin board system as a service to
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its customers.
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Attorneys for the Austin game publisher contend that the seizure of the
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bulletin board represents a violation of the Electronic Communications Privacy
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Act, which is based on Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search
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and seizure.
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"Because you bring such joy to my friend Walter's life, and also because I
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liked you when I met you, though I wish I could have seen your lovely face a
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little more, I'll send you an autographed copy of Bestiary," said McCoy,
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reading in part from a letter penned by Steffan O'Sullivan, the author of the
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GURPS Bestiary, a fantasy treatise on mythical creatures large and small.
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Although the correspondence entered the public record upon McCoy's reading, the
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Chronicle obtained explicit permission from the principles before excerpting
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from it.
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The electronic mail was contained on the game publisher's public bulletin board
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system, Illuminati, which allowed game-players, authors and others to exchange
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public and personal documents. After agents seized the BBS during a raid staged
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as part of a nationwide crackdown on computer crime, Secret Service analysts
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reviewed, printed and deleted the 162 pieces of undelivered mail, testimony
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indicated.
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When the BBS computer was returned to its owner several months later, a
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computer expert was able to resurrect many of the deleted communications,
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including McCoy's friendship letter.
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"I never thought anyone would read my mail," she testified. "I was very shocked
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and embarrassed.
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"When I told my father that the Secret Service had taken the Steve Jackson
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bulletin board for some reason, he became very upset. He thought that I had
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been linked to some computer crime investigation, and that now our computers
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would be taken."
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O'Sullivan, who is a free-lance game writer employed by Steve Jackson, followed
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McCoy to the stand, where he testified that agents intercepted -- via the
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Illuminati seizure -- a critical piece of electronic mail seeking to establish
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when a quarterly royalty check would arrive.
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"That letter never arrived, and I had to borrow money to pay the rent," he
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said.
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No charges were ever filed in connection with the raid on Steve Jackson Games
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or the simultaneous raid of the Austin home of Jackson employee Loyd
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Blankenship, whose reputed membership in the Legion of Doom hackers' group
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triggered the raids.
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Plaintiffs contend that the government's search-and-seizure policies have cast
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a chill over a constitutionally protected form of public assembly carried out
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on bulletin boards, which serve as community centers often used by hundreds of
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people. More than 300 people were denied use of Jackson's bulletin board,
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called Illuminati, for several months after the raid, and documents filed with
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the court claim that a broader, continuing chill has been cast over the online
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community at large.
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The lawsuit against the Secret Service seeks to establish that the Electronic
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Communications Privacy Act guarantees the privacy of electronic mail. If U.S.
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District Court Judge Sam Sparks accepts this contention, it would become
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necessary for the government to obtain warrants for each caller to a bulletin
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board before seizing it.
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The Justice Department contends that users of electronic mail do not have a
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reasonable expectation to privacy, because they are voluntarily "disclosing"
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their mail to a third party -- the owner of the bulletin board system.
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"We weren't going to intercept electronic mail. We were going to access stored
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information," said William J. Cook, a former assistant U.S. Attorney in Chicago
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who wrote the affidavit for the search warrant used in the Steve Jackson raid.
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The Justice Department attorneys did not substantially challenge testimony by
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any of the several witnesses who were denied use of Illuminati. They did,
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however, seek to prevent those witnesses from testifying -- by conceding their
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interests -- after Cayce's compelling appearance led off the series of
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witnesses.
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Most of the Justice Department's energies were directed toward countering
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damage claims made by Steve Jackson, whose testimony opened the second day of
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the trial. Most of the day's testimony was devoted to a complex give-and-take
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on accounting issues. Some $2 million is being sought in damages.
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Justice sought to counter the widely repeated assertion that Steve Jackson
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Games was nearly put out of business by the raid by showing that the company
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was already struggling financially when the raid was conducted. An accountant
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called by the plaintiffs countered that all of Jackson's financial problems had
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been corrected by a reorganization in late 1989.
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Steve Jackson Games/Secret Service wrapup
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By JOE ABERNATHY
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Copyright 1993, Houston Chronicle
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AUSTIN -- An electronic civil rights case against the Secret Service closed
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Thursday with a clear statement by federal District Judge Sam Sparks that the
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Service failed to conduct a proper investigation in a notorious computer crime
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crackdown, and went too far in retaining custody of seized equipment.
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The judge's formal findings in the complex case, which will likely set new
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legal precedents, won't be returned until later.
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A packed courtroom sat on the edge of the seat Thursday morning as Sparks
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subjected the Secret Service agent in charge of the investigation to a grueling
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dressing-down.
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The judge's rebuke apparently convinced the Department of Justice to close its
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defense after calling only that one of the several government witnesses on
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hand. Attorney Mark Battan entered subdued testimony seeking to limit the
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award of monetary damages.
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Secret Service Special Agent Timothy Foley of Chicago, who was in charge of
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three Austin computer search-and-seizures on March 1, 1990, that led to the
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lawsuit, stoically endured Spark's rebuke over the Service's poor investigation
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and abusive computer seizure policies. While the Service has seized dozens of
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computers since the crackdown began in 1990, this is the first case to
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challenge the practice.
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"The Secret Service didn't do a good job in this case. We know no investigation
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took place. Nobody ever gave any concern as to whether (legal) statutes were
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involved. We know there was damage," Sparks said in weighing damages.
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The lawsuit, brought by Steve Jackson Games of Austin, said that the seizure of
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three computers violated the Privacy Protection Act, which provides First
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Amendment protections against seizing a publisher's works in progress. The
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lawsuit further said that since one of the computers was being used to run a
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bulletin board system containing private electronic mail, the seizure violated
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the Electronic Communications Privacy Act in regards to the 388 callers of the
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Illuminati BBS.
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Sparks grew visibly angry when it was established that the Austin science
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fiction magazine and game book publisher was never suspected of a crime, and
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that agents did not do even marginal research to establish a criminal
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connection between the firm and the suspected illegal activities of an
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employee, or to determine that the company was a publisher. Indeed, agents
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testified that they were not even trained in the Privacy Protection Act at the
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special Secret Service school on computer crime.
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"How long would it have taken you, Mr. Foley, to find out what Steve Jackson
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Games did, what it was?" asked Sparks. "An hour?
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"Was there any reason why, on March 2, you could not return to Steve Jackson
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Games a copy, in floppy disk form, of everything taken?
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"Did you read the article in Business Week magazine where it had a picture of
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Steve Jackson -- a law-abiding, tax-paying citizen -- saying he was a computer
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crime suspect?
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"Did it ever occur to you, Mr. Foley, that seizing this material could harm
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Steve Jackson economically?"
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Foley replied, "No, sir," but the judge offered his own answer.
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"You actually did, you just had no idea anybody would actually go out and hire
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a lawyer and sue you."
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More than $200,000 has been spent by the Electronic Frontier Foundation in
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bringing the case to trial. The EFF was founded by Mitchell Kapor amid a civil
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liberties movement sparked in large part by the Secret Service computer crime
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crackdown.
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"The dressing-down of the Secret Service for their behavior is a major
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vindication of what we've been saying all along, which is that there were
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outrageous actions taken against Steve Jackson that hurt his business and sent
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a chilling effect to everyone using bulletin boards, and that there were larger
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principles at stake," said Kapor, contacted at his Cambridge, Mass., office.
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"We're very happy with the way the case came out," said Shari Steele, who
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attended the case as counsel for the EFF. "That session with the judge and Tim
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Foley is what a lawyer dreams about."
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That session seemed triggered by a riveting cross-examination of Foley by Pete
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Kennedy, Jackson's attorney.
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Kennedy forced Foley to admit that the search warrant did not meet even the
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Service's own standards for a search-and-seizure, and did not establish that
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Jackson Games was suspected of being involved in any illegal activity.
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"Agent Foley, it's been almost three years. Has Chris Goggans been indicted?
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Has Loyd Blankenship been indicted? Has Loyd Blankenship's computer been
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returned to him?"
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The purported membership of Jackson Games employee Blankenship in the Legion of
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Doom hacker's group triggered the raids that day on Jackson Games,
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Blankenship's home, and that of Goggans, a Houstonian who at the time was a
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University of Texas student. No charges have been filed, although the computer
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seized from Blankenship's home -- containing his wife's dissertation -- never
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has been returned.
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After the cross-examination, Sparks questioned Foley on a number of key details
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before and after the raid, focusing on the holes in the search warrant, why
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Jackson was not allowed to copy his work in progress after it was seized, and
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why his computers were not returned after the Secret Service analyzed them, a
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process completed before the end of March.
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"The examination took seven days, but you didn't give Steve Jackson's computers
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back for three months. Why?" asked an incredulous Sparks. "So here you are,
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with three computers, 300 floppy disks, an owner who was asking for it back,
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his attorney calling you, and what I want to know is why copies of everything
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couldn't be given back in days. Not months. Days.
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"That's what makes you mad about this case."
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The Justice Department contended that Jackson Games is a manufacturer, and that
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only journalistic organizations can call upon the Privacy Protection Act. It
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contended that the ECPA was not violated because electronic mail is not
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"intercepted" when a BBS is seized. This argument rests on a narrow definition
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of interception.
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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The SURFPUNK Technical Journal is a dangerous multinational hacker zine
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originating near BARRNET in the fashionable western arm of the northern
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California matrix. Quantum Californians appear in one of two states,
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spin surf or spin punk. Undetected, we are both, or might be neither.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Send postings to <surfpunk@osc.versant.com>, subscription requests
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to <surfpunk-request@osc.versant.com>. MIME encouraged.
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Xanalogical archive access soon. Confusion to our enemies.
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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