301 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
301 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Excerpts from:
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The Phone Book
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By J. Edward Hyde
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What the telephone company would rather you not know
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Word processed by BIOC Agent 003 for Pirate Trek
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The following excerpts were taken from "The Phone Book" which was written by
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J. Edward Hyde (nom de plume) who was a former Telco employee.
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Section III: Ripoffs, Robberies, Blue Boxes, and Fraud
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(003: Is Ma Bell security really that bad? Answer that question after you
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read the following:)
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Introduction:
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When Daniel Ellsberg published material that the gov't of Richard Nixon felt
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was detrimental to its well-being, it employed burgulary, blackmail, threats,
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and coercion to try to stop him. Richard & Co. failed.
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When Ramparts magazine published material that the Phone Company felt was
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detrimental to its well-being, it employed blackmail, threats, and coercion to
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halt publication. Bell & Co. succeeded.
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A seemingly airtight case involving an alleged member of the underworld was
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thrown out of court when it was discovered that the wiretap order was signed by
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an ass't to the attorney general and not by the attorney general himself.
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A Bell employee with nine years of service was fired, hounded, harassed,
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burgularized, and beaten, merely because he was overheard talking to a
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suspected phone phreak during what he assumed to be a private call.
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Two teen-agers were caught breaking into the coin box of a pay phone. They
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received six-month prison sentences. The "take" in their heist was $74.40.
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A coin supervisor was caught padding his pockets with nickels, dimes, and
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quarters collected by his people in the collection department of a midwestern
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Telephone Company. He admitted stealing more than $6,000 and was asked to
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resign. He did and no charges were
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filed...
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TAKING CARE OF THE CUSTOMER
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===========================
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In an effort to "minimize tariff abuse," the company begins checking 20% of
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its one- and two-line customers every year by means of electronic surveillance.
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"It's nothing new," claims one phone executive. "We've been doing it for
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years."
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"The confidentiality of customer records is a sacrosanct." So testifies a
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regional manager of the Bell System. Yet his company, only three days later,
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confronts one of its business customers and orders him to cut back on the # of
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dir. asst. calls he makes. As proof, the Company shoves a computer printout
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sheet under his nose. On it is listed every dir. asst. call he has made in
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the past 2 months, the #'s he called, how long he talked, the day and time...
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Although the company refused to authorize records checks unless they are
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subpoenaed and cannot authorize wiretaps except on written authority of the
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attorney general of the U.S., it successfully lobbied for a section of the
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Omnibus Crime Act of 1968 that enabled it to "make random checks to maintain
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the quality of service"--in other words, tapping lines wherever and whenever
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the company feels like it. Under the law, the company doesn't have to justify
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such actions to anyone. The act of surveillance is done in complete secrecy.
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Well aware of its own rules regarding harassment of customers while collecting
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overdue accounts, service reps in a West Coast city are told to disconnect the
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customer's service if he refuses to be reasonable regarding the payment of his
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bill.
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For making $30 worth of fraudulent credit card calls, a young Washington, DC
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college student is given a thirty-day jail term and fined $250. In that same
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city, a phone employee caught doing the same thing tells a plausible story and
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is merely suspended for three days and told not to do it again.
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A bitter opponent of interconnection, (003: ie, using non-bell equipment on
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the line) Bell provides "statistics proving conclusively that interconnection
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causes 25% more repair problems." When asked to provide figures on its own
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repair problems, Bell refuses to do so.
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THE RAMPARTS AFFAIR
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===================
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"...Bell's self-protective reflexes have created an atmosphere of fear that
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may well muzzle deserved criticism..." (003: quote from "Business Week
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magazine, February 2, 1970.)
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The article scheduled to appear in the June, 1972, issue of Ramparts magazine
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was not innocuous. It was calculated to cause a run on the available copies.
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Although this is exactly what happened, the demand was not caused by the
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regular readership. It was created by a Phone Company anxiously trying to
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avert what it was sure would be a financial disaster.
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The subject of the article was mute boxes (003: ie, blue, red...boxes) and
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how to build them in 19 easy-to- follow steps, although you never would have
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know it had you not read the article itself. For the title, "Regulating the
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Phone Company in Your Home," gave hardly a clue to the material at hand. The
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two-paragraph lead-in attributed the information in the article to "documents
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which have come into our hands," and no specific mention of the subject matter
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appeared until the last sentence of the lead-in. The body of the offending
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article was written in a style best described as Early "Popular Electronics,"
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but if the directions were followed to the letter the reader could build
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himself a dandy little mute box. Although the article (or document) did not
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specifically spell out the criminality involved in making and using such a
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device, the last several paragraphs were devoted to ways and means of avoiding
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detection. Assuming you were intelligent enough to build the unit, you were
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also supposedly smart enough to realize that there could be penalties.
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Ramparts did not tell its readers about the $500 to $1,000 fines and the year
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in prison awaiting those who where caught. Even if this had been done, it is
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highly unlikely that the Phone Company would have reacted any differently
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because the company saw no ground for compromise. The only act that would
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assuage its passionate anger would be a mass book burning. For all intents and
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purposes, the Phone Company got what it wanted.
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It began on May 12, 1972, near the end of the working day. A special agent of
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the Phone Company walked into the Ramparts office, gave the receptionist a
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sheaf of paper and his calling card, and left. The next morning, he called.
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The pile of paper he left the night before was a copy of the California penal
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code, he explained, and for the benefit of everyone concerned he had underlined
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a section sure to be of special interest. Section 502.7, covering the
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illegality of selling "plans or instruction for any instrument, apparatus, or
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device intended to avoid telephone toll charges" and stating the penalties for
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doing so, merited attention. Having said all he inteded to for the time being,
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the special agent hung up. The threat, carefully veiled in the agent's
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well-modulated tone, might well have impressed the Mafia.
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It is fortunate for us that the initial theat failed to achieve results. Had
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the Ramparts backed down immediately, we never would have known the extent of
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the company's rage--or the extent of its power. The "Ramparts Affair"
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graphically illustrates the all-pervading influence of an organization in some
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ways more powerful than the gov't. Only by exposing its corruptive influence
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can we see that something definitely needs to be done to remedy the situation.
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The next step the company took was to notify the Associated Press that it
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intended to file civil charges against the editors. This was by no means an
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empty threat. In San Francisco, where Ramparts is (003: was) published, the
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company's legal staff numbered 160. These agents moved to block the
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distribution of the magazine.
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Many copies had already been mailed to subscribers prior to the Phone
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Company's entry into the case. The company demanded access to the mailing list
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so that it could keep everyone listed under surveillance. Ramparts refused.
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The Phone Company demanded that the copyright of the article be turned over to
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it to prevent anyone else from publishing the material. It also told Ramparts
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to answer reporters' queries on the matter with a curt "no comment." When an
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outraged publisher at first refused to concede, the company unleasehed its big
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guns. It threatened 500 magazine distributors scattered all across the
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country. Under this serious economic threat, the publisher finally agreed to
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withdraw the June issue from the newsstands before the withdrawl order.
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The company made an effort to recapture them all. Sending out agents in a
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nationwide move, the company covered every library and isolated newsstand it
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could find. In a memo, Bell directed its employees that the Ramparts article
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should be "collected by whatever means necessary to effect their removal from
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newsstands and magazine racks in public places," and that "the exact method for
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collection... will be left to the discretion of individual supervisors... "
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Some supervisors made the order crystal clear: steal.
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By now the publicity was such that a few radio stations had decided to read
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the story over the air. The Phone Company quickly cut them short with threats
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of criminal charges.
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Perhaps the article wasn't an example of responsable journalism, but the
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subsequent suppression wasn't any kind of example of freedom of the press,
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either. Simply because you tell someone how a bank can be robbed does not make
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you guilty of criminal conspiracy--especially if you are describing methods
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that have already been used. A prime example of this is television scripting.
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An idea dreamed up by some scriptwriter may influence a real-life
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criminal--it's happended before and will happen again. (003: have you read
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about the FBI arresting 10 people for breaking into a top secret gov't computer
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after seeing "wargames," yet?) But the scriptwriter cannot be held responsible
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because some fool goes out and actually puts his idea into practice. For the
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same reason, Ramparts should not be held responsable for the possible actions
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of its readers--or so you'd think. That Ramparts can be held responsible has
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already been established through good old section 502.7 of the California Penal
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Code. The author of the section 502.7 freely admits that he sponsored the bill
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for the benefit of several telephone lobbyists he partied with during several
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sessions of the legislature.
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While not a crisis of major proportions to anyone except Ramparts and a
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paranoid company, the "Ramparts Affair" clearly illustrates how far the company
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will go to protect its interests with the business sector of its customers.
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But the company is no respecter of individual rights, either. As we have
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already seen, the Constitution is no great hindurance....
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THE BLUE-BOX GANG
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=================
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In all Criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy
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and public trial,by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the
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crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously
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ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the
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accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory
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process for obtaining witnessed in his favor, and to have the assistance of
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counsel for his defense. (The Constitution of the U.S., Art. 6, para. 1.)
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His name is not important. What happened to him is.
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Since 1962, his employer had been Bell and, in the nine years he was with
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them, he worked his way up to a position of responsibility between Bell and
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Western Electric. In his spare time, he was a radio officer for a civil
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defense unit and a well-know electronics enthusiast. His employer was
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satisfied with his work and he was satisfied with his employer. Things
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couldn't have been nicer.
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One night he met another electronics buff. They talked about things of mutual
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interest and, after mentioning that he worked for Bell, his new friend asked
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him if he was familiar with phone phreaks and their activities. He wasn't, so
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his friend filled him in. He couldn't believe the things he was told. His new
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friend set out to show him that what he said was true.
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This friend was already under surveillance for his phone-phreak activities.
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When he called our man to innocently ask about car telephone units, the
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security men listening in thought the 2 men were discussing portable blue
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boxes. Based on what was overheard, the security staff immediately marked
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their fellow employee as a spy and turncoat. Although he didn't know it,
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nearly everything he did and nearly everything he said was monitored from that
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moment on.
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One night, his friend gave him a phone number to call to prove that phreaking
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really did exist. What he heard appalled him. He immediately did what any
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good employee should--he called security. Security asked him what he though
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they could do about it and hung up. He was soon to find out.
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A few hours later, 2 security men and a local policeman showed up at his home
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and began searching the premises. Although neither of the Bell men was named
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on the search warrant, they roamed freely and finally confiscated a sizable
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quantity of electronic gear despite claims that it had nothing to do with
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phones. Then they marched him off to jail.
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At the county jail, he found that he was one of five men arrested that night.
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One of the other four was his friend. He didn't recognize any of the others,
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but it didn't make any difference. The blue box had been found in the home of
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his friend.
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Although the equipment taken from his home was in no way related to phone
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phreaking, it was put on display for the newsmen to take pictures of, along
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with the 5 fraud conspirators. As the newsmen poked about, a Bell publicist
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told all who cared to listen that the company intended to crack down on phone
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phreaks and their strange little toys-- the blue boxes. Then the 5 men were
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released.
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The next day, he lost his job. Within the week, civil defense let him go.
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Wherever he went seeking work in his field, he went unhired. His reputation
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preceded him.
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His phone would go dead for days at a time for no explanable reason. He
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noticed an additional wire running from his phone connection plate. A loyal
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friend told him that it ran to the local Phone Company office. The company
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refused to disconnect it.
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The legal case pending against him fell through when his lawyer obtained a
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motion of denial because the evidence against him had been collected illegally.
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Bell immediately announced that it would file an appeal--although it hasn't
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done so yet and it's been (10) years since his arrest. Bell wasn't through,
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however.
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Two nights after his court appearance, his house was broken into. Several
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pieces of electrical equipment were all that was taken.
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One night a few weeks after that, a stranger appeared at his door asking him
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where he had gotten his blue box. when told that there never was a blue box,
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the stranger hit him hard enough to cause internal bleeding. It took 2 phone
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calls and 3 hours for the police to arrive.
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On the day the charges against him were dropped, Bell officials called a news
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conference. Announcing a full-scale war against the phreaks, whom it termed "a
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great threat to national security," Bell expressed outrage that the charges had
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been dropped by "over-lenient courts," and vowed to redouble its efforts to
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stop the spread of so serious a crime. It was nearly as good as its word. In
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1972, 37 phone phreaks were apprehended. In 1973, the total rose to 62.
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The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
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effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and
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no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or
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affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
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persons or things to be seized. (The Constitution of the U.S., Article IV)
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....
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You have just read pages 79 through 88 of "The Phone Book", by J. Edward
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Hyde. Henery Regnery Company, Chicago, 1976.
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These are just a few of the inside stories about how bell really operates.
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Now how do you answer my question in the beginning of this file?
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Bell security: myth or monster?
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Believe it or not--I found this book in my local library (384.6), so check
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those card catalogs. It is an excellent book.
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*****BIOC Agent 003
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*****Phreak advisor of Pirate Trek
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