TX - A former manager of the Brazos Valley Bombers is behind bars, accused of secretly video taping several of his female employees while they were changing.
Kfir Jackson, 32, was arrested Friday. He is charged with five counts of improper photography or visual recording.
According to Bryan police, Jackson asked several female employees to change into some uniforms he was considering them wearing for their job. The victims became suspicious they were being videotaped and called police
Bryan police say on Wednesday, the Criminal Investigation Division executed a search warrant at 405 Mitchell St. in Bryan. That's listed as the Brazos Valley Bombers' office. Several electronic items including computers were seized. These items were forensically analyzed at the Bryan Police Department. Images found on the hard drive of one of Jackson's computers were consistent with the victims account. (more)
Friday, December 17, 2010
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Ultimate TSCM Smackdown
The explosion heard in Lebanon late Wednesday was an Israel Air Force operation aimed at destroying an espionage device it had installed off the coast of the city of Sidon, the Voice of Lebanon radio station reported on Thursday.
The report comes a day after the Lebanese Army said it had uncovered two Israeli spy installations in mountainous areas near Beirut and the Bekaa Valley, The installations included photographic equipment as well as laser and broadcast equipment...
On December 3, Hezbollah activists found Israeli wiretapping equipment near the southern Lebanese town of Tyre. After it was discovered, the equipment was destroyed by remote control in a blast that injured two Lebanese civilians...
Hezbollah said the installations were used to tap into the independent fiber-optic communications network that the Islamic organization set up throughout Lebanon in 2008.
In October of last year, Hezbollah operatives uncovered another wiretapping installation near the southern Lebanese village of Houlah. According to Lebanese security officials, the facility had tapped into Hezbollah's independent landline telephone system. ...the equipment consisted of underground Israeli wiretapping installations that Israel blew up by remote control out of concern that they were about to be discovered.
Israel has neither confirmed nor denied that the equipment served as a surveillance installation... (more)
"Bug-in-a-Book" project at the Spy Museum
via David Simpson
We all love spy gear, from the wacky Maxwell Smart rotary-dial shoephone to the grab bag of goodies Bond always so nonchalantly snares from Q. Thank you, MAKE, for Volume 16, the "Spy Tech" issue, which featured Mad Magazine's iconic Spy vs. Spy on the cover. In that issue, you can find my wireless "Bug-in-a-Book" project. The guts come from readily available Radio Shack components (a mini FM transmitter for listening to your iPod through the car stereo and a grandpa-tech amplified listener).
Fast forward: I'll be leading that workshop at the Spy Museum at the end of January.
The session will open with an "NCIS-like" briefing, laying out an impeding threat and mission, but I can't divulge the full details here. Let's just say that this whole thing was triggered by an encrypted message intercepted by an allied listening post off the coast of Algeria on one of the long wave frequencies known to be used by a US-based black market arms dealer and certain intermediaries representing a radical militant religious group targeting pro-western nations. Maybe by now it's becoming clearer; the well-being of the free world lies in the hands of the young makers that attend this workshop and the intelligence they're able to gather during surveillance using their field-made Bug-in-a-Book. (more)
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Attic'ed to Love
Authorities apprehended a man who camped out in his ex-girlfriend's attic to spy on her every move.
Merced County Sheriff's Department was called when the girlfriend feared her ex had been in her home.
"One of our deputies actually crawled up into the attic and found him there hiding under some insulation," Merced County Sheriff's Department Deputy Tom MacKenzie said, "and evidence appeared that he had been there for some time."
The girlfriend first thought something was out of place when she noticed her cell phone was missing.
"The scary part is he came down sometime at night to steal her cell phone while it was charging to see if she had been calling any new guys or new boyfriends," MacKenzie said. (more) (creepy, but sing-a-long anyway)
Merced County Sheriff's Department was called when the girlfriend feared her ex had been in her home.
"One of our deputies actually crawled up into the attic and found him there hiding under some insulation," Merced County Sheriff's Department Deputy Tom MacKenzie said, "and evidence appeared that he had been there for some time."
The girlfriend first thought something was out of place when she noticed her cell phone was missing.
"The scary part is he came down sometime at night to steal her cell phone while it was charging to see if she had been calling any new guys or new boyfriends," MacKenzie said. (more) (creepy, but sing-a-long anyway)
Why You Shouldn't Use Outlook Rules to Intercept Your Boss's E-mails
Big surprise! Turns out that forwarding your boss's e-mail to yourself with Outlook rules is quite illegal. Ars Technica reports that David Szymuszkiewicz, now a former IRS worker, learned this the hard way after being convicted on wiretapping charges under the U.S. Wiretap Act.
Already in hot water for driving drunk with a suspended license, Szymuszkiewic's job required he drive to the homes of delinquent tax payers. Out of fear for his job, Szymuszkiewicz set up a rule on his supervisor Nella Infusino's Outlook application that forwarded any e-mails sent to her...
Despite the rather serious charges, Szymuszkiewicz was sentenced to a relatively lenient 18 months probation. (more)
Already in hot water for driving drunk with a suspended license, Szymuszkiewic's job required he drive to the homes of delinquent tax payers. Out of fear for his job, Szymuszkiewicz set up a rule on his supervisor Nella Infusino's Outlook application that forwarded any e-mails sent to her...
Despite the rather serious charges, Szymuszkiewicz was sentenced to a relatively lenient 18 months probation. (more)
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...we are hemorrhaging trade secrets, patents, trademarks, confidential consumer data...
"...Our leadership in the development of creative and innovative products and services also makes us a global target for theft... (intellectual property) thieves impose substantial costs. They depress investment in technologies needed to meet global challenges. They put consumers, families and communities at risk. They unfairly devalue America's contribution, hinder our ability to grow our economy, compromise good, high-wage jobs for Americans and endanger strong and prosperous communities."
-- From the 2010 Joint Strategic Plan On Intellectual Property Enforcement, published earlier this year by the newly established Office Of The U.S. Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC), which is part of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
This grim assessment and the publication in which it appears is very much in line with President Obama's campaign promise to crack down on intellectual property theft. The unfortunate reality is that the President is responding to a crisis that has worsened despite the enactment over several decades of numerous federal and state laws aimed at deterring the theft of intellectual property.
Prominent among these laws is the Uniform Trade Secrets Acts (UTSA). Enacted in 1970, UTSA makes it illegal to use protected information gathered from others, or that is deliberately stolen or obtained through blackmail. Under UTSA such theft is punishable by civil law, but it is also criminal behavior as defined by the Economic Espionage Act of 1996.
Sadly, these (and other) well-intentioned pieces of legislation have not stanched the bleeding of the U.S.'s estimable trove of intellectual wealth. If anything, we are hemorrhaging trade secrets, patents, trademarks, confidential consumer data and classified government files (consider "WikiLeaks").
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
What part of this story is stupid?
CA - Despite PG&E's earlier claims that he acted alone, a former executive who monitored online discussion groups by activists opposed to SmartMeters widely shared what he gleaned with other PG&E employees.
Internal PG&E documents turned over to state regulators and made available to the Mercury News on Monday also reveal that PG&E went beyond mere online monitoring. A series of e-mail exchanges show that PG&E sent an employee to monitor a SmartMeter demonstration in Rohnert Park in October. The employee, whose name was redacted, took at least four photographs of protesters, writing in an e-mail, "This is fun, no one said 'espionage' in the job description."
"It's quite creepy to know that we were actually being spied on by PG&E," Sebastopol resident Sandi Maurer said. "They were at our protest, watching, taking photographs and sending notes back to PG&E." (more)
Internal PG&E documents turned over to state regulators and made available to the Mercury News on Monday also reveal that PG&E went beyond mere online monitoring. A series of e-mail exchanges show that PG&E sent an employee to monitor a SmartMeter demonstration in Rohnert Park in October. The employee, whose name was redacted, took at least four photographs of protesters, writing in an e-mail, "This is fun, no one said 'espionage' in the job description."
"It's quite creepy to know that we were actually being spied on by PG&E," Sebastopol resident Sandi Maurer said. "They were at our protest, watching, taking photographs and sending notes back to PG&E." (more)
What part of this story is stupid?
A. That PG&E spied on an activist group?
B. The PG&E employee's comment?
C. That one of the protesters thought spying was "quite creepy?"
D. None of the above.
E. All of the above?
Answers...
A. It is not uncommon for businesses to infiltrate / monitor the activities of activist groups. In many cases it is justifiable.
B. The PG&E employee was not hired for their investigative skills. Unprofessional comments and a blown cover should be expected.
C. Typical knee-jerk reaction. A lawsuit will be the next thought.
E. Logic flaw, trick answer.
D. None of the above is the correct answer. The stupid part was PG&E not handling their business investigation in a professional manner. DIY investigations (like DIY TSCM) is like DIY laser eye surgery – blindingly stupid.
Who knows why they did it: too cheap to hire a professional investigator, a rogue operation by some mid-level manager, etc.??? The story is still unfolding down the Stairs of Fiasco like a drunken slinky. Stay tuned.
What we do know...
This is costing PG&E (and ultimately) their consumers a ton of money and bad publicity. The worst may yet be headed toward the fan... "It is of serious concern to the CPUC that a senior PG&E official may have been involved in unethical behavior," commission representative Terrie Prosper said Monday. "The allegations of misconduct, if proven to be true, could warrant possibly severe sanctions by the CPUC."
Who knows why they did it: too cheap to hire a professional investigator, a rogue operation by some mid-level manager, etc.??? The story is still unfolding down the Stairs of Fiasco like a drunken slinky. Stay tuned.
What we do know...
This is costing PG&E (and ultimately) their consumers a ton of money and bad publicity. The worst may yet be headed toward the fan... "It is of serious concern to the CPUC that a senior PG&E official may have been involved in unethical behavior," commission representative Terrie Prosper said Monday. "The allegations of misconduct, if proven to be true, could warrant possibly severe sanctions by the CPUC."
Moral: Always hire the best professional you can for the job.
...followed by an evening sojourn to Cafe de la Paix to obtain their secret croissant recipe!
Budding secret agents will be given a license to thrill when the first ever Spy Camp at Disneyland Paris is staged on 8th October 2011.
In the most exciting event of its kind ever staged in Europe, Spy Camp at Disneyland Paris will offer youngsters aged 8 to 16 an exclusive chance to emulate their movie heroes by taking part in a spy-themed adventure at the resort.
Spy Camp is divided into two phases, starting with induction training in the morning and moving up to more advanced training in the afternoon. (more)
Monday, December 13, 2010
Chemical Company is Catalyst for Activists Lawsuit
LA - The U.S. division of South Africa’s Sasol chemical plant is facing a lawsuit for industrial espionage and sabotage, filed by environmental activists Greenpeace.
The case, which also involves the Dow Chemical Co. and two public relations firms, was filed in Federal Court in Washington, DC.
Greenpeace claims the two companies hired private investigators to steal its documents, tap its phones, and hack into its computers. Central to the complaint is a community's battle against the pollution of Lake Charles, in Louisiana, near the Sasol plant. (more)
The case, which also involves the Dow Chemical Co. and two public relations firms, was filed in Federal Court in Washington, DC.
Greenpeace claims the two companies hired private investigators to steal its documents, tap its phones, and hack into its computers. Central to the complaint is a community's battle against the pollution of Lake Charles, in Louisiana, near the Sasol plant. (more)
Business Lobbyist Drowned in Leaked Wiretaps
India - A fresh batch of leaked recordings of wiretapped phone calls between an Indian corporate lobbyist and her high-profile political and media contacts are aggravating the political turmoil that has paralyzed Parliament.
The tapes show how Niira Radia, a lobbyist for two of the nation's largest conglomerates, industrial titan Tata Group and oil-and-petrochemicals company Reliance Industries Ltd., advanced her clients' interests with friendly journalists and sought to use her connections to influence the formation of the Indian government's cabinet after last year's national elections.
The recordings have fueled the unfolding controversy in India over the way the government allocated mobile-phone spectrum to companies in 2008—a process critics describe as a multibillion-dollar heist of taxpayers, in which a few favored companies got bargain prices for a valuable public resource. The tapes have given rise to a debate over the extent to which powerful Indian industrial houses have been favored by close government ties in one of the nation's biggest industries, mobile telecommunications.
The tapes are being examined by investigators to see if they shed light on the spectrum-allotment controversy. (more)
The tapes show how Niira Radia, a lobbyist for two of the nation's largest conglomerates, industrial titan Tata Group and oil-and-petrochemicals company Reliance Industries Ltd., advanced her clients' interests with friendly journalists and sought to use her connections to influence the formation of the Indian government's cabinet after last year's national elections.
Associated Press Lobbyist Niira Radia being questioned in New Delhi. |
The tapes are being examined by investigators to see if they shed light on the spectrum-allotment controversy. (more)
Sunday, December 12, 2010
SpyCam Story #594 - Tap Cappy Defender
Turkey - The lawyer of former Eskişehir police chief Hanefi Avcı -- who is suspected to have illegally wiretapped dozens of individuals -- is accused of having installed a hidden camera in the management room of the apartment building where he currently resides.
Lawyer Fidel Okan, who resides in the Baymak Apartment in Ankara’s Eryaman neighborhood, is said to have installed the camera to record building management meetings. The residents of the building noticed the camera during a recent meeting. (more)
Lawyer Fidel Okan, who resides in the Baymak Apartment in Ankara’s Eryaman neighborhood, is said to have installed the camera to record building management meetings. The residents of the building noticed the camera during a recent meeting. (more)
SpyCam Story #593 - Cops Play Hardball
OK - A former Oklahoma City high school coach has admitted to police that he secretly videotaped his girls’ softball team while players changed clothes in the locker room, a police detective reported Wednesday...
Police have been investigating him since May, when the new coach found Hestand’s personal Sony video camera and tapes in the softball equipment room...
Police officers also viewed the tapes and found evidence the girls were recorded on different days in the locker room and that the hidden camera was repositioned to capture a better angle, the detective reported. The officers discovered numerous teenage softball players were recorded in various stages of undress.
“After the softball players leave the room … a male voice asks, ‘Is everyone out?’ After receiving no answer, a hand is shown and the video ends,” the detective wrote. (much more)
Doh! Another spycam'er shoots himself.
Cop Bugs Exam Room - Caught, Testing 1-2-3-4
UK - A senior officer in Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist squad has been sacked after trying to cheat in a promotion exam.
The detective inspector bugged an examination room where rival candidates were being interviewed — but the recorder was discovered when the tape holding it to the bottom of a table came unstuck and it fell to the floor...
The senior officer conducting the interview called the Yard's internal investigations unit to launch an inquiry. The detective inspector had tested the machine earlier by using his own voice and was quickly recognised by colleagues. (more)
Doh! Another bugger shoots himself.
The detective inspector bugged an examination room where rival candidates were being interviewed — but the recorder was discovered when the tape holding it to the bottom of a table came unstuck and it fell to the floor...
The senior officer conducting the interview called the Yard's internal investigations unit to launch an inquiry. The detective inspector had tested the machine earlier by using his own voice and was quickly recognised by colleagues. (more)
A Brief History of U.S. Tap and Bug Law
Congress enacted the first federal wiretap statute as a temporary measure to prevent disclosure of government secrets during World War I. Later, it proscribed intercepting and divulging private radio messages in the Radio Act of 1927, but did not immediately reestablish a federal wiretap prohibition. By the time of the landmark Supreme Court decision in Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438 (1928), however, at least forty-one of the forty-eight states had banned wiretapping or forbidden telephone and telegraph employees and officers from disclosing the content of telephone or telegraph messages or both. (more)
Extra Credit:
Friday, December 10, 2010
...thus giving Santa a run for his money in the spying department.
If the popularity of spy toys as holiday gifts is any indication, the future of our TSCM services to business and government is secure for decades to come. Kids learn through play.
The only thing that has changed since my last big review in December, 2006 is the sophistication of the toys themselves. There are some amazing gadgets out there this year.
Check out this toy...
"The Spy Net Secret Mission Video Watch is the ultimate infiltration tool and comes packed with high-tech features. The working video camera and microphone record over 20 minutes of video, 2,000 photos or 4 hours of audio. The watch's full color 1.4" TFT screen lets you watch recorded videos and provides live playback. Onboard memory lets you store your secret evidence, which you can then load onto your home computer with the included USB cable. Video missions are available for download on the cool Spy Net website."
Only one of their many spy tools for kids...
"Spy Net takes high end electronics and interactive gadgets and puts them in the hands - and on the wrists! - of burgeoning young secret agents. For undercover surveillance, detection and communication, Spy Net provides all the technology you'll need to tackle any secret mission!"
Think this is a myth meme?
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