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U.S. Agents Go On Line And After Fraud Suspects
Clifford J. Levy 
The New York Times 
September 12, 1995 
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The United States Secret Service put together a computer bulletin board to 
troll for people who illegally traffic in the codes that program cellular 
phones. 

The sting is the latest indication that law enforcement agencies are being 
forced to try novel strategies to keep up with the growth in computer-assisted 
crime. 

According to the criminal complaint in the case, the Secret Service used the 
Internet to announce that the bulletin board catered to those involved in 
breaking into computers and in cellular-phone and credit-card fraud. 

The sting led to the arrests of at least six suspected hackers. 

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Secret Service Goes On Line and After Hackers
Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune 
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It was a classic sting operation, the kind of undercover gambit that has
nabbed bad guys for decades: Federal agents disguised as big-time thieves
set up shop and put the word out on the street that they were eager for
business.  Soon shifty characters were stopping by, officials said,
peddling stolen goods that were worth millions of dollars. But as the
agents revealed yesterday, the meeting place for this subterfuge was not
some grimy storefront. It was a computer bulletin board that the United
States Secret Service had rigged together to troll for people who are
illegally trafficking in the codes that program cellular phones. The
"computer service," which led to the arrests of at least six suspected
hackers and the possibility of more, is the latest indication that law
enforcement agencies are being forced to try novel strategies to keep up
with the startling growth in computer-assisted crime. Cellular-phone fraud
alone cost companies $482 million last year, the cellular-phone industry
estimates. According to the criminal complaint in the case, a Secret
Service agent used the Internet, the global computer network, to announce
that the bulletin board catered to those involved in breaking into
computers and in cellular-phone and credit-card fraud. "People all over
the country responded," said Peter A. Cavicchia 2d, the special agent in
charge of the Newark office of the Secret Service, which ran the
investigation.

 "They felt they could do this with impunity." The Secret Service, which
is the Federal agency charged with going after cellular phone and credit
card fraud, has long been known to monitor commercial computer on-line
services like Prodigy and America Online, as well as smaller, private
computer bulletin boards, for illegal activities. But officials said this
case represented the first time that the Secret Service had created an
entirely new computer bulletin board, which is basically a system that
links different computer users, allowing them to chat with and leave
messages for each other. There have been a few instances of other law
enforcement agencies creating bulletin boards for investigations. "If they
are selling the stuff in cyberspace, law enforcement has to be willing to
go there," said Donna Krappa, an assistant United States Attorney in
Newark, who is on the team prosecuting the case. "And the way to do that
is to have a fence in cyberspace." As Federal law enforcement officials
detailed it, the investigation unfolded much like a traditional sting that
draws in people hawking stolen televisions, jewelry or cars. The agents
made contact with the suspects, then worked to gain their confidence and
allay their suspicions. The difference, of course, was that most of these
discussions were conducted with computers talking over telephone lines.
Last January, a Secret Service special agent, Stacey Bauerschmidt, using
the computer nickname Carder One, established a computer bulletin board
that she called Celco 51. It is relatively easy to put together a private
computer bulletin board, requiring only a computer, a modem, phone lines
and communications software. Special Agent Bauerschmidt was assisted by an
informer with experience as a computer hacker, officials said. The
equipment and phone line for the scheme were located in a Bergen County,
N.J., apartment building. After buying hundreds of the stolen phone codes,
the Secret Service conducted raids in several states late last week,
arresting the six people and seizing more than 20 computer systems, as
well as equipment for making cellular phones operate with stolen codes,
said the United States Attorney in Newark, Faith S. Hochberg. Officials
said that of those arrested, two of them, Richard Lacap of Katy, Tex., and
Kevin Watkins of Houston, were particularly sophisticated because they
actually broke into the computer systems of cellular phone companies to
obtain the codes. It is more common for thieves to steal the codes by
using scanners that intercept the signals that the phones send when making
calls. "We consider this to be one of the most significant of the wireless
fraud busts that have come down so far," said Michael T. Houghton, a
spokesman for the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association, a
trade group. "These guys took it another degree." The others arrested were
identified as Jeremy Cushing of Huntington Beach, Calif.; Al Bradford of
Detroit, and Frank Natoli and Michael Clarkson, both of Brooklyn.

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ON-LINE STING JUST THE BEGINNING, SAYS CYBER-SLEUTH SQUAD
Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune 

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Federal agents say the computer hacker called "Alpha Bits" was looking to
sell stolen cellular phone account information when he ventured into
"Celco 51," an Internet bulletin board that veteran cyber-crooks treated
as an on-line black market. "Celco 51" was known as the place to sell
ill-gotten credit card numbers and cellular phone accounts, all from the
comfort of your home computer, authorities allege. But "Alpha Bits" and
other computer hackers didn't know that the fencing operation was run by
the U.S. Secret Service in what agents say might be the first on-line
sting operation in this country's history. "We created a thieves' den and
invited them in," Secret Service Special Agent Peter A. Cavicchia II said
Tuesday. Last week, agents arrested Jeremy Golle Cushing, 22, a Huntington
Beach resident who goes by the moniker "Alpha Bits," and five other people
as part of "Operation Cybersnare." Cushing awaits extradition to New
Jersey to face federal fraud charges. Cavicchia said the effort is just
the first new battlefront in the war on fraud. "They can't hide
anymore. The same computers and technology they use to commit crime are
now coming back to bite them." The Secret Service's bulletin board was up
and running only a few hours before the first prospective customer, a
computer user calling himself "Black Knight," visited the electronic
clearinghouse with hopes of peddling credit card account information,
Cavicchia said. Soon others, with monikers such as "Chillin" and
"Barcode" also came in search of money, the veteran agent said. One of the
others who allegedly sought out the "Celco 51" bulletin board to fence
electronic data was "Alpha Bits," an alias that agents said belongs to
Cushing. Cushing was on probation when Secret Service agents from Los
Angeles arrested him. Last year, he finished up a one-year jail stay after
pleading guilty to 18 felony charges, including passing bad checks,
possession of stolen goods and computer-related crimes. The computer
expert, a former Ocean View High School student, was a familiar face to
Huntington Beach Police Officer Mike Reynolds, who said he has arrested
Cushing numerous times. "He is a very sophisticated young man," Reynolds
said Tuesday night. "This kid is gonna be an economic crime expert for the
rest of his life. The problem is he is involved in crimes that are very
rarely investigated." Cushing and five others were arrested in four states
during a sweep last week by federal agents. Another 14 raids spread over
eight states led to the confiscation of 31 computers, 65 illegally
programmed phones and 14 "readers," devices used to illegally pluck
cellular phone numbers and serial codes from cellular phone transmissions,
authorities said. Those phone numbers and serial codes can be used by
thieves to steal cellular phone air-time and charge it to unsuspecting
consumers. Cushing was charged with trafficking "cloned" cellular phones
-- the phones that have been reprogrammed with the stolen information --
and possession of stolen access codes, Cavicchia said. If convicted,
Cushing faces up to 15 years in prison and $250,000 in fines. Cushing's
mother described him Monday as a former honors student who became consumed
by the heady thrills of the hacking lifestyle. Vickie Cushing said
witnessing her son's addiction to using the computer was "like watching
the disintegration of a person." The family declined further comment on
the case Tuesday, but Vickie Cushing repeated her warning to parents who
encourage their children's use of computers but don't monitor the nature
or extent of that use. "It can be so, so destructive," she said. Cavicchia
said the public's view of hacking as "a harmless thing done for kicks by
kids and geeks" seriously underplays a broad range of financial crimes
that cost information and financial industries millions and can wreck the
finances of unsuspecting consumers. "A crook is a crook," he said. "This
is not a victimless crime. If these guys get hold of your information, it
wrecks your credit rating for years and leaves you with a huge mess to
clean up. And they're gone, $5,000 or $10,000 ahead." Jim Goode, the
manager of fraud control at LA Cellular, said the cellular phone carriers
in North America project a 1995 loss of more than $500 million because of
fraud involving cloned phones and stolen access numbers. Goode said his
team of investigators works closely with local and federal investigators
and sees more than 200 arrests a month in the company's four-county
service area. The data thieves use "readers" to scan cellular
transmissions for the signatures of the phones being used by consumers,
Goode said. When the scanning devices lock onto the phone number and
serial code of a particular phone, the thieves have what amounts to an
electronic fingerprint of that phone's account information. The thieves
then use other equipment to reprogram a second phone with that stolen
information, creating a "cloned" phone. All calls made on the second phone
are then illegally billed to the account of the first phone, Goode
said. PAGE 20 Los Angeles Times, September 13, 1995 Los Angeles Times
September 13, 1 The use of personal identification numbers to
"lock" account information has dissuaded some thieves, and a new tracking
system that will be operating in coming months will put a further dent
into the number of cloned phones. "The new system will be able to
distinguish a legitimate call from a call made on a counterfeit
phone," Goode said. "It's just another tool to shut these guys
down." Cavicchia, who described himself as a member of the "pinball
generation," said he is both impressed and intimidated by his field
office's foray into high-tech crime-busting. Most exciting, he said, is
that other newly devised tactics in the months and years to come promise
to further complicate the lives of computer and cellular crooks. Hoping to
keep the keyboard criminals off balance, he declined to say what form
those new tactics might take. 

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COMPUTER HACKER SNARED IN CYBER-STING
Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune 

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A Huntington Beach computer hacker known on-line as "Alpha Bits" was among
six suspects arrested in four states by the U.S. Secret Service for
allegedly using technology to steal credit card and cellular phone
information worth millions of dollars, authorities said Monday. Jeremy
Golle Cushing, 22, on Monday waived extradition proceedings before a
U.S. magistrate in Orange County and will be ferried by marshals to
Newark, N.J., within three weeks to be arraigned on federal computer fraud
charges, authorities said. Cushing is suspected of trafficking in cloned
cellular telephone equipment and stolen-access devices used to program
cellular phones. He was already on probation after pleading guilty last
year to 18 felony charges, including passing bad checks, theft of cards or
codes for financial access and receiving stolen property, officials
said. The arrest of Cushing and others Friday in New York, Texas and
Michigan were part of "Operation Cybersnare," a sting operated via the
Internet. Agents set up and advertised a computer bulletin board called
"Celco 51" in Bergen County, N.J., as a clearinghouse of sorts for stolen
data. An agent, using the computer moniker "Carder One," posed as the
board's operator and offered to fence stolen data for hackers, officials
said. The bulletin board was targeting the hackers who pilfer the
electronic serial numbers and mobile identification numbers used to encode
cellular telephones. With those codes, a computer criminal can program any
cellular phone to bill all its calls to the person whose code numbers have
been stolen, officials said. Cushing, who spent a year in jail for his
past offenses, now faces 15 years and $250,000 in fines if found guilty of
the latest charges. The case is being prosecuted by the U.S. attorney's
office in Newark, N.J., according to Secret Service Special Agent Jim
Bauer of the Los Angeles office. The suspect's mother, Vickie Cushing of
Huntington Beach, said the arrest has left her family humiliated and
searching for answers. "These kids get involved in all this computer
stuff, it becomes a game to them, then it's addictive," Cushing said,
sobbing. "It can be destructive too. When Jeremy got involved in
computers, we thought, 'Isn't this marvelous?' We PAGE 23 Los Angeles
Times, September 12, 1995 Los Angeles Times September 12, 1 were
naive. Parents need to be very alert about computers. If I had a youngster
today, I'd tell them, 'No modems.' " * Vickie Cushing, an Orange County
social worker, said her son's fascination with computers began during his
sophomore year at Ocean View High School. The honor student fell in with a
crowd who delighted in testing the boundaries of their computer expertise,
she said. As they got older, some in the group began turning their skills
toward illegal profit. For Jeremy Cushing, hacking consumed his life, his
mother said. "It was like watching the disintegration of a person," she
said. On Monday, Vickie Cushing and her husband, Jeffrey, made the hard
decision not to put their home up to secure bail for their only child. "I
couldn't do that," she said. "The bottom line is he had choices. He had
the opportunity to stop. He's a very bright young man. It's a waste." The
other suspects arrested were Richard Lacap of Katy, Tex., who uses the
computer alias "Chillin," and Kevin Watkins of Houston, known on-line as
"Led." They were charged with conspiring to break into the computer system
of an Oregon cellular telephone company. Frank Natoli, also known as
"Mmind," of Brooklyn, N.Y., was charged with trafficking in stolen access
devices. Michael "Barcode" Clarkson, also of Brooklyn, was charged with
possessing and trafficking in hardware used to obtain unauthorized access
to telecommunications services. Al Bradford of Detroit, who calls himself
"Cellfone," was charged with trafficking in unauthorized access
devices. Agents seized more than 20 computer systems during the
arrests. Cushing was arrested Friday in Huntington Beach without incident,
Bauer said. 

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ON-LINE 'SWAG SHOP' STING YIELDS 6 ARRESTS
Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune 

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An on-line invitation to buy stolen cellular telephone and credit card
data led to the arrest of six people and the seizure of more than 20
computer systems, authorities said Monday. During an eight-month
investigation, an undercover Secret Service agent using the name "Carder
One" and a confidential informant operated a private computer bulletin
board system called "Celco 51," authorities said. Through the Internet,
the undercover team advertised that Celco 51 catered to those involved in
computer fraud, court papers said. "What we really did was set up an
old-fashioned 'swag shop' in cyberspace," said Assistant U.S. Atty. Donna
Krappa, who is prosecuting the case. A swag shop is where stolen goods are
traded. Two of the suspects were accused of conspiring to break into the
computer system of McCaw Cellular in Portland, Ore., now AT&T
Wireless. The others were accused of selling the numbers to peoples'
cellular phones. AT&T Wireless says the loss of a single cellular phone
code costs them $500. The six people were arrested in California,
Michigan, Texas and New York City. 

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6 HACKERS ARRESTED IN COMPUTER FRAUD
Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
Chicago Tribune 

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A Huntington Beach computer hacker -- known on-line as "Alpha Bits" -- was
among six suspects arrested in four states by the U.S. Secret Service for
allegedly using technology to steal credit card and cellular phone
information worth millions of dollars, authorities said Monday. Jeremy
Golle Cushing, 22, on Monday waived extradition proceedings before a
U.S. magistrate in Orange County and will be taken by U.S. marshals to
Newark, N.J., within three weeks to be arraigned on federal computer fraud
charges, authorities said. Cushing is suspected of trafficking in cloned
cellular telephone equipment and stolen access devices used to program
cellular phones. He was already on probation after pleading guilty last
year to 18 felony charges, including passing bad checks, theft of cards or
codes for financial access and receiving stolen property, officials
said. The arrests of Cushing and others Friday in New York, Texas and
Michigan were part of "Operation Cybersnare," a sting operated via the
Internet. Agents set up and advertised a computer bulletin board called
"Celco 51" in Bergen County, N.J., as a clearinghouse of sorts for stolen
data. An agent, using the computer moniker "Carder One," posed as the
board's operator and offered to fence stolen data for hackers, officials
said. The bulletin board was targeting the hackers who pilfer the
electronic serial numbers and mobile identification numbers used to encode
cellular telephones. With those codes, a computer criminal can program any
cellular phone to bill all its calls to the person whose code numbers have
been stolen, officials said. Cushing, who spent a year in jail for his
past offenses, faces 15 years and $250,000 in fines if found guilty of the
latest charges. The case is being prosecuted by the U.S. attorney's office
in Newark, according to Secret Service Special Agent Jim Bauer of the Los
Angeles office. The other suspects arrested were Richard Lacap of Katy,
Tex., who uses the computer alias "Chillin," and Kevin Watkins of Houston,
known on-line as "Led." They were charged with conspiring to break into
the computer system of an Oregon cellular telephone company. Frank Natoli,
also known as "Mmind," of Brooklyn, N.Y., was charged with trafficking in
stolen access devices. Michael Clarkson, known as "Barcode," also of
Brooklyn, was charged with possessing and trafficking in hardware used to
obtain unauthorized access to telecommunications services. Al Bradford of
Detroit, who calls himself "Cellfone," was charged with trafficking in
unauthorized access devices. Agents seized more than 20 computer systems
during the arrests. Cushing was arrested Friday in Huntington Beach
without incident, Bauer said.