Monday, November 17, 2008
For Sale: TSCM instrumentation. Bargain prices.
Ever wonder what happens to last generation professional eavesdropping detection instruments? Find out, here... The Ultimate TSCM Sale.
PIs Allegedly Plant a Bug They Were Hired to Find
A cautionary tale...
Australia - Lesley Broadbent did not feel safe anywhere... she believed she was under constant surveillance... To try and put her mind at ease she hired a private eye company, with the help of her daughter, Cheryl Metcalfe.
Two female private investigators and a man allegedly claimed they found a "listening device" in Ms. Broadbent's roof, after a bug sweep of her Nambour house.
The trio was yesterday committed to stand trial in Maroochydore Magistrates Court, accused of planting the device.
The court heard Kathleen Joan Kitchner, 53, and Corinne Martell, 46, first went to the Nambour home on June 4 this year, and went back with Shane Martell for a second bug sweep a couple of days later.
After climbing into the roof, Mr. Martell emerged with a device he said had been found somewhere above the kitchen, the court heard...
The court heard Ms. Metcalfe began to get suspicious when the investigators failed to hand the device in to police and refused to return phone calls.
Ms. Martell said the company, Private Eyes 007, seemed perfectly legitimate at first. "They were professional, they had credentials and professional equipment with them, I wouldn't have thought anything else," Ms. Metcalfe told the court. (more)
Tricks of the trade...
While most private investigators are sincere and honest, a few are fraudsters. The "plant a bug, to find a bug," trick is fairly common. Combined with other scare tactics, it is used to assure unnecessary additional inspections and sales of countermeasures gadgets, CCTV cameras, etc..
Even sincere private investigators can provide ineffective eavesdropping detection services, inadvertently. Eavesdropping detection is a specialty. When handled in a Jack-of-all-trades fashion, it is rarely successful, no matter how good the intentions.
Please, if you are seeking assistance to solve a personal electronic surveillance matter, hire a specialist. To find candidates in your area use google.com; search term: TSCM [+ your city or state]. Carefully evaluate your candidates. Trust your instincts.
Businesses and governments have an even greater need for a specialist – the issues are more complicated, the stakes are higher. Finding a bug is not the goal; discovering an espionage attack while there is still time to prevent damage is the goal.
Employ the most experienced specialist you can find. Ask fellow security directors for recommendations, and don't be afraid to 'fly in' the best people. Importing security consultants is commonplace. High stakes demand the best preventative measures.
Resource for locating information security consultants, eavesdropping detection specialists and counterespionage consultants:
• International Association of Professional Security Consultants
Still need help, or a second opinion? Call me. ~Kevin
Australia - Lesley Broadbent did not feel safe anywhere... she believed she was under constant surveillance... To try and put her mind at ease she hired a private eye company, with the help of her daughter, Cheryl Metcalfe.
Two female private investigators and a man allegedly claimed they found a "listening device" in Ms. Broadbent's roof, after a bug sweep of her Nambour house.
The trio was yesterday committed to stand trial in Maroochydore Magistrates Court, accused of planting the device.
The court heard Kathleen Joan Kitchner, 53, and Corinne Martell, 46, first went to the Nambour home on June 4 this year, and went back with Shane Martell for a second bug sweep a couple of days later.
After climbing into the roof, Mr. Martell emerged with a device he said had been found somewhere above the kitchen, the court heard...
The court heard Ms. Metcalfe began to get suspicious when the investigators failed to hand the device in to police and refused to return phone calls.
Ms. Martell said the company, Private Eyes 007, seemed perfectly legitimate at first. "They were professional, they had credentials and professional equipment with them, I wouldn't have thought anything else," Ms. Metcalfe told the court. (more)
Tricks of the trade...
While most private investigators are sincere and honest, a few are fraudsters. The "plant a bug, to find a bug," trick is fairly common. Combined with other scare tactics, it is used to assure unnecessary additional inspections and sales of countermeasures gadgets, CCTV cameras, etc..
Even sincere private investigators can provide ineffective eavesdropping detection services, inadvertently. Eavesdropping detection is a specialty. When handled in a Jack-of-all-trades fashion, it is rarely successful, no matter how good the intentions.
Please, if you are seeking assistance to solve a personal electronic surveillance matter, hire a specialist. To find candidates in your area use google.com; search term: TSCM [+ your city or state]. Carefully evaluate your candidates. Trust your instincts.
Businesses and governments have an even greater need for a specialist – the issues are more complicated, the stakes are higher. Finding a bug is not the goal; discovering an espionage attack while there is still time to prevent damage is the goal.
Employ the most experienced specialist you can find. Ask fellow security directors for recommendations, and don't be afraid to 'fly in' the best people. Importing security consultants is commonplace. High stakes demand the best preventative measures.
Resource for locating information security consultants, eavesdropping detection specialists and counterespionage consultants:
• International Association of Professional Security Consultants
Still need help, or a second opinion? Call me. ~Kevin
Sunday, November 16, 2008
F/S Used Car w/ slight water damage, £80,000+
The white 1976 Lotus Esprit
from the 1977 film The Spy Who Loved Me, starring Roger Moore and Barbara Bach, will be sold by the international auctioneers on 1 December at its annual motoring Auction Sale at Olympia, in West London.
The vehicle is one of two Lotus cars driven in the film by Roger Moore’s James Bond character. It turns into an amphibious car for the movie, driven both on land and underwater. (moore) relax, it's a jokeClick here to read an article first published contemporarily in Road and Track Magazine by Doug Nye, renowned motor historian and Bonhams consultant.
For further information please contact: Tim Schofiel, +44 (0) 20 7468 5804
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Spy gear used to cheat immigration test
UK - Two men have been jailed after using hi-tech hidden cameras, transmitters and surveillance gadgets to tell candidates sitting the exams the right answers.
The Life in the UK test is the last step towards earning citizenship and those who pass are then entitled to apply for a British passport.
But there are fears unsuitable candidates may have earned the right to settle here thanks to a highly sophisticated scam to cheat the questions.
Participants, who did not understand English, went in to a test centre in Wimbledon library, south west London, armed with a hidden shirt buttonhole camera, microphone and earpiece. In a scam akin to a scene in a James Bond movie, two fraudsters sat outside in BMW car packed with hi-tech equipment and a laptop and directed them to tick the right answers via the secret link.
When police first came across the pair they thought they were running a cashpoint fraud, skimming the cards of unsuspecting users.
But it emerged they were helping Chinese nationals undertake the multiple choice immigration tests in the nearby building. (more)
The Life in the UK test is the last step towards earning citizenship and those who pass are then entitled to apply for a British passport.
But there are fears unsuitable candidates may have earned the right to settle here thanks to a highly sophisticated scam to cheat the questions.
Participants, who did not understand English, went in to a test centre in Wimbledon library, south west London, armed with a hidden shirt buttonhole camera, microphone and earpiece. In a scam akin to a scene in a James Bond movie, two fraudsters sat outside in BMW car packed with hi-tech equipment and a laptop and directed them to tick the right answers via the secret link.
When police first came across the pair they thought they were running a cashpoint fraud, skimming the cards of unsuspecting users.
But it emerged they were helping Chinese nationals undertake the multiple choice immigration tests in the nearby building. (more)
Labels:
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Hack,
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FutureWatch - Rise of the Franchise Spy
from their press release...
The Spy Place LLC is now developing its Business Model for a Franchise System.
Raymond Huck, President and Founder of The Spy Place LLC, has just announced that the new company, The Spy Place Franchising LLC., has contracted with Scott C. Kern, ... to prepare and register a Franchise Disclosure Document to allow the franchising of The Spy Place.
"Since we opened here last October, the ft. Wayne business community has received us very well", Huck said... The Spy Place, is a retail operation that sells and installs affordable Remote Viewing Video Surveillance Systems...
The Spy Place, also sells, through its retail store, and soon on its Web-Site, www.thespyplace.com computer tracking software... Vehicle tracking software is something that is also very popular today. The Spy Place sells and installs these units as well... The Spy Place, even sells some "James Bond, gadgets too. Take for instance the neck tie or ball point pen that is a camera, or the pen that is an MP3 voice recorder...
We intend to educate all potential Franchisees with one week hands on training at our flagship store located in ft. Wayne, and continue with a second week of training at The Spy Place University, located at our world headquarters, also here in ft. Wayne, Indiana.
Upon the successful completion of The Spy Place University, the graduate will now enjoy the use of, and the excitement generated from the use of our 'The Spy Place' name.
Spy Shops, have been around for a long time... kindalike adult bookstores. Even the previous attempts at franchising missed the mark: either too self-important, pricey and megalopolitan, or too strip mall-ish. Both came staffed with people who didn't get the used car sales position they really wanted.
The Spy Place, LLC may be different. Even though their debut press release could give a 7th grade English teacher angina, and 'surveillance' is spelled wrong on their youtube video entry, these folks may be the Paul Revere's of their craft. (Paul was a spy and a craftsman.) When heartland America, Indiana, sprouts an out-of-the-closet Spy Shop, you know "spy" is no longer a dirty word.
(youtube commercial; narrated by aSean Connery Mr. 'T'etanus sound-a-like.)
The Spy Place LLC is now developing its Business Model for a Franchise System.
"Since we opened here last October, the ft. Wayne business community has received us very well", Huck said... The Spy Place, is a retail operation that sells and installs affordable Remote Viewing Video Surveillance Systems...
Upon the successful completion of The Spy Place University, the graduate will now enjoy the use of, and the excitement generated from the use of our 'The Spy Place' name.
Spy Shops, have been around for a long time... kindalike adult bookstores. Even the previous attempts at franchising missed the mark: either too self-important, pricey and megalopolitan, or too strip mall-ish. Both came staffed with people who didn't get the used car sales position they really wanted.
The Spy Place, LLC may be different. Even though their debut press release could give a 7th grade English teacher angina, and 'surveillance' is spelled wrong on their youtube video entry, these folks may be the Paul Revere's of their craft. (Paul was a spy and a craftsman.) When heartland America, Indiana, sprouts an out-of-the-closet Spy Shop, you know "spy" is no longer a dirty word.
(youtube commercial; narrated by a
FutureWatch - Fingerprint 'developer' can read a letter from its envelope
Paul Kelly and colleagues at Loughborough University found that a disulfur dinitride (S2N2) polymer turned exposed fingerprints brown, as the polymer reaction was initiated from the near-undetectable remaining residues. Traces of inkjet printer ink can also initiate the polymer.
The detection limit is so low that details of a printed letter previously in an envelope could be read off the inside of the envelope after being exposed to S2N2. (more)
Friday, November 14, 2008
FutureWatch - Micro Cameras
The new image sensor has a pixel pitch of 1.4μm. Sample shipments will start in March 2009 at a price of ¥2,500 (approx. US $25.75). (more)
When these find their way into the production stream it will make the cell-phone-as-a-professional-spy-tool a reality. Also, look for these new sensors in pens and other spycam housings. Yet another good reason to secure your sensitive paperwork at night. ~Kevin
Our Staff Spies a Real Busybody in Philadelphia
What is a BUSYBODY, you may ask. As any resident of Old Philadelphia can tell you, the BUSYBODY is a set of three mirrors set in a black metal frame - two mirrors on the bottom and one mirror on top. It is held together by a scrolled iron bar which mounts alongside or under a window, or next to a door, usually on the second or third story of a house (first floor for ranch type houses).
By adjusting the mirrors, the home dweller can see who's at the door below, or what's going on up and down the street
Invented by none other than Philadelphia's most famous denizen, Ben Franklin!
Attaches to windowsill with 2 screws. Overall height 21". Overall width 12 1/2". Each mirror measures 5" x 6". Sources: Busybody1 Busybody2
Labels:
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product,
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voyeurism,
weird
Electronic Surveillance Law Overview
US - Privacy: An Overview of Federal Statutes Governing Wiretapping and Electronic Eavesdropping – Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress (164 pages)
Thursday, November 13, 2008
SpyCam Story #494 - Janitors Mopped Up
Felicitos Gonzalez, who lives a block away from the bustling Metro-North facility, was arrested at his home and charged with 16 counts of voyeurism, the Stamford Advocate first reported on its Web site.
The perverted scheme was unraveled after a woman found the camera inside a basket of toilet paper and contacted the MTA police. Gonzalez could still face additional charges. (more)
CA - A former janitor has been given three years in prison for secretly videotaping students in the girls' locker room of a Westlake Village school.
Hilario Medina, 39, was sentenced Friday. He pleaded guilty to sexually violating the privacy of children. Eighteen lesser charges were dismissed.
Prosecutors say Medina used a video camera wrapped in a shirt and placed on a maintenance cart to secretly tape at least 18 girls at Oaks Christian School, which has grades six through 12. (more)
SpyCam Story #493 - 15-Years. No Parole.
He admitted he used a hidden camera to secretly videotape at least 20 female customers, including seven minors, while they used the tanning beds... An employee of 360 Degree Tan discovered video of a customer (a minor female) in various stages of undress, including full nudity, on the business' computer... The employee reported what she found to Springfield police...
The camera lens was mounted inside the fan unit of a tanning bed using Velcro tape, positioned at the foot of the bed. Velcro tape was also found inside the fan unit of a second tanning bed. (more)
Satellite Version of Lo-Jack Proves Worth
The new £50,000 machine travelled thousands of miles before it was found, journeying across England before resurfacing in the Netherlands and then going to Germany and back. It was tracked and recovered in an operation involving five English police forces as well as Dutch and German detectives.
...eight days after the theft the device switched itself on, telling police that the digger was in Middlesbrough. Four days later the tracker was sending a signal from Lancashire, but by the following day the digger was back in Humberside. The device was monitored by a group called Securi-Guard... then, they knew that it had left British shores, because the signal died.
Pete Stanley, of Securi-Guard, said: “It had been shipped over the North Sea in a container so the global positioning satellite (GPS) couldn’t pick up the tracker device until it had been unloaded.” (more)
$1 million reward for arrest of cyberextortionists
MO - A pharmacy benefits management firm announced that it is offering a $1 million reward for information leading to the conviction of whomever is threatening to divulge the personal information of millions of its members.
St. Louis-based Express Scripts disclosed it received an anonymous letter that included the names, Social Security numbers, birth dates and, in some cases, prescription information of 75 members. The writer or writers threatened to release millions more of similar records if the business failed to pay an unspecified sum of money.
Anyone with information should contact the FBI at (800) CALL-FBI (225-5324). (more)
St. Louis-based Express Scripts disclosed it received an anonymous letter that included the names, Social Security numbers, birth dates and, in some cases, prescription information of 75 members. The writer or writers threatened to release millions more of similar records if the business failed to pay an unspecified sum of money.
Anyone with information should contact the FBI at (800) CALL-FBI (225-5324). (more)
Labels:
business,
computer,
data,
espionage,
extortionography,
FBI,
mores,
trade secret
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Spy Coins - You know you want one!
During the Cold War, Spies from both the East and West used Hollow Coins to ferry secret messages, suicide poisons, and microfilms undetected.On May 1st, 1960 U2 Pilot, Francis Gary Powers, was shot down over the Soviet Union and taken captive. In his possession was a hollow silver dollar containing a poisoned needle that was to be used to take his own life in such a circumstance. For one reason or another, he did not use it and was held for 21 months by the Soviets. He was then exchanged for Soviet spy KGB Colonel Vilyam Fisher (aka Rudolf Abel) at the Glienicke Bridge, in Berlin, Germany.
Colonel Fisher was also no stranger to hollow coins... his original capture by the United States FBI was directly related to a hollow nickel that was used to transport microfilm.
Want one? Become a client. Click here.
Make: Your own spy gear!
Make Volume 16 will help you get smart [Sorry about that, Chief.] with a special section on spy tech. Learn how to build and use tiny surveillance devices, and how to know if a spy is using them on you. From tiny video cameras to sneaky recorders, this volume has enough cool stuff to make James Bond's inventor Q envious.
Coming soon!
On newsstands November 25!
(more) (complete Table of Contents)
Your Security Nightmare - Covert USB Sticks
Hint: This is really a 250GB USB drive – disguised as a flask! (more)
The reality is, you really don't know. These devices can carry a small library of your business secrets out the door, and make you smile at the same time. Conversely, they can also be used to inject spyware and viruses.
If you see these in your workplace don't be amused, be suspicious. ~Kevin
Labels:
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cautionary tale,
computer,
espionage,
FutureWatch,
product,
spybot,
spyware,
USB
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
"Virtually undetectable spy camera built into classy looking metal and glass wrist watch for James Bond like espionage.
Ever want to go to a dress up party or to the office with a spy camera, but couldn't find the spy tool that you could carry with you wherever you went without drawing attention? We solved this problem for you, with this micro spy camera built into a fancy watch which lets you take spy video without anyone ever being the wiser. Artfully hidden behind the number 2, this mini-cam gives you an AVI format 352x288 resolution clips at 15FPS, and with 2GB of onboard storage, you will get hours upon hours of video.
The watch itself is an elegantly designed full metal watch with a glass face cover, has accurate, gear driven time in seconds, minutes and hours, has a back clasp design for easily taking the watch on and putting it off, and a twisting crown for time adjustment.
Imagine the candid video with sound that you can take without anyone ever being the wiser..." (more)
Why do I mention it?
So you will know what you are up against.
Lady: Bugs in flowers. Bed bugs, too!
MI - James Holland pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count of stalking, two misdemeanor counts of attempted eavesdropping and one misdemeanor count of illegal entry, said Steven Hiller, deputy chief assistant prosecutor for Washtenaw County.
Holland had faced more serious felony charges of home invasion and eavesdropping, but the charges were reduced in a plea deal, Hiller said...
Holland's former girlfriend discovered a voice-activated tape recorder hidden in a flower basket on a wall in her home Sept. 4 and contacted the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department, sheriff's Sgt. David Archer said. Deputies interviewed Holland that night and he admitted to placing two tape recorders in his ex-girlfriend's home, Archer said.
"He confessed to a second recorder in the bedroom of the victim,'' Archer said.
Archer said Holland had entered his ex-girlfriend's home with a duplicate key, which he had made before he returned a key she had given him. (more)
Holland had faced more serious felony charges of home invasion and eavesdropping, but the charges were reduced in a plea deal, Hiller said...
Holland's former girlfriend discovered a voice-activated tape recorder hidden in a flower basket on a wall in her home Sept. 4 and contacted the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department, sheriff's Sgt. David Archer said. Deputies interviewed Holland that night and he admitted to placing two tape recorders in his ex-girlfriend's home, Archer said.
"He confessed to a second recorder in the bedroom of the victim,'' Archer said.
Archer said Holland had entered his ex-girlfriend's home with a duplicate key, which he had made before he returned a key she had given him. (more)
$1 Billion Trade Secrets Theft - Employee Charged
CA - A former Intel Corp. engineer has been charged with stealing trade secrets worth $1 billion from the chip maker while he worked for its main rival, Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Federal prosecutors in Massachusetts alleged this week in a five-count indictment that Biswamohan Pani, 33, illegally downloaded more than a dozen confidential documents from Intel's computer system in California during a four-day stretch in June. He had already resigned from Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel, but remained on the payroll and still had access to the company's computers while he burned unused vacation days.
What Pani's supervisors didn't know then is that instead of taking the time to investigate a hedge fund job Pani claimed he was considering, he had actually started working for AMD and for a brief period was on both companies' payrolls. (more)
Federal prosecutors in Massachusetts alleged this week in a five-count indictment that Biswamohan Pani, 33, illegally downloaded more than a dozen confidential documents from Intel's computer system in California during a four-day stretch in June. He had already resigned from Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel, but remained on the payroll and still had access to the company's computers while he burned unused vacation days.
What Pani's supervisors didn't know then is that instead of taking the time to investigate a hedge fund job Pani claimed he was considering, he had actually started working for AMD and for a brief period was on both companies' payrolls. (more)
Secret Service Secret Code Words Announced (?!?!)
via Associated Press...
"The Secret Service has released the code names for the Obama and Biden families.
The White House Military Office dubbed President-elect Barack Obama “Renegade,” while his wife, Michelle Obama, is “Renaissance.”
Their children, Malia and Sasha, were named “Radiance” and “Rosebud.”
Vice President-elect Joe Biden was given the name “Celtic.” His wife, Jill, was nicknamed “Capri.”
A spokesperson said the names aren’t as important as they once were because of more sophisticated communications equipment that’s more difficult to eavesdrop." (more)
We can make you a difficult eavesdropping target, too. Call us.
"The Secret Service has released the code names for the Obama and Biden families.
The White House Military Office dubbed President-elect Barack Obama “Renegade,” while his wife, Michelle Obama, is “Renaissance.”
Their children, Malia and Sasha, were named “Radiance” and “Rosebud.”
Vice President-elect Joe Biden was given the name “Celtic.” His wife, Jill, was nicknamed “Capri.”
A spokesperson said the names aren’t as important as they once were because of more sophisticated communications equipment that’s more difficult to eavesdrop." (more)
We can make you a difficult eavesdropping target, too. Call us.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Spying is an art. Spying is art. Spying is. Spying.
For most people, photographing something that isn't there might be tough. Not so for Trevor Paglen.
His shots of 189 secret spy satellites are the subject of a new exhibit -- despite the fact that, officially speaking, the satellites don't exist. The Other Night Sky, on display at the University of California at Berkeley Art Museum through September 14 [Apologies for the late reporting.], is only a small selection from the 1,500 astrophotographs Paglen has taken thus far.
In taking these photos, Paglen is trying to draw a metaphorical connection between modern government secrecy and the doctrine of the Catholic Church in Galileo's time. (more)
(Applause)
Very cool, Trevor!
And, that's not all...
Trevor has a unusual book, too!
They’re on the shoulder of all military personnel: patches that symbolize what a soldier’s unit does. But what happens if it’s top secret? Shown here for the first time, these sixty patches reveal a secret world of military imagery and jargon, where classified projects are known by peculiar names (“Goat Suckers,” “None of Your F***ing Business,” “Tastes Like Chicken”) and illustrated with occult symbols and ridiculous cartoons. Although the actual projects represented here (such as the notorious Area 51) are classified, these patches—which are worn by military units working on classified missions—are precisely photographed, strangely hinting at a world about which little is known.
By submitting hundreds of Freedom of Information requests, the author has also assembled an extensive and readable guide to the patches included here, making this volume one of the best available surveys of the military’s black world—a $27 billion industry that has quietly grown by almost 50 percent since 9/11.
Labels:
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tracking
SpyCam Story #492 - Camp Dumbstaffer
Canada - A camp employee who claimed he was only trying to scare a female co-worker when he hid a video camera in her shower stall will be sentenced in January.
The 19-year-old Fergus-area man pleaded guilty yesterday to voyeurism and breaching an undertaking by contacting the victim. The man cannot be named to protect the identity of his 17-year-old victim.
Court heard OPP were called to a camp in Wellington County Aug. 5 where a female employee reported being videotaped in the shower.
Police learned the girl was showering when she discovered the video camera on a shelf, hidden among some toiletries but pointed directly into the stall.
Officers discovered three videos on the camera. The first two depicted the suspect aiming the camera to ensure it was aimed correctly, while the third showed the victim nude in the shower.
The suspect was arrested for voyeurism and released by police on an undertaking, including a condition that he not contact the victim.
Nine hours later, he sent the victim a message through the Facebook networking website.
In that message, he wrote that the camera was there as "a prank" and said his intention was to scare someone and get their reaction on video. (more)
The 19-year-old Fergus-area man pleaded guilty yesterday to voyeurism and breaching an undertaking by contacting the victim. The man cannot be named to protect the identity of his 17-year-old victim.
Court heard OPP were called to a camp in Wellington County Aug. 5 where a female employee reported being videotaped in the shower.
Police learned the girl was showering when she discovered the video camera on a shelf, hidden among some toiletries but pointed directly into the stall.
Officers discovered three videos on the camera. The first two depicted the suspect aiming the camera to ensure it was aimed correctly, while the third showed the victim nude in the shower.
The suspect was arrested for voyeurism and released by police on an undertaking, including a condition that he not contact the victim.
Nine hours later, he sent the victim a message through the Facebook networking website.
In that message, he wrote that the camera was there as "a prank" and said his intention was to scare someone and get their reaction on video. (more)
Corporate Spy Suit Ends
Von Roll USA Inc. said Friday it has settled its lawsuit against four former employees it had accused of corporate espionage.
In a U.S. District Court filing last December, the Swiss-based company claimed the employees, including former Chief Executive Jack Craig, were using stolen information to set up a rival company, Craig Wire Products LLC.
The suit even claimed that the employees — the others were Brett Portwood, Brad Archambeau and Linda Belcher — remotely accessed confidential information on Von Roll computers in its plant in Rotterdam.
Belcher and Archambeau are former managers at Von Roll's Rotterdam plant, court papers say.
On Friday, Von Roll in a written statement said "all claims and counterclaims in the case have now been settled and the lawsuit will be discontinued in its entirety." (more)
In a U.S. District Court filing last December, the Swiss-based company claimed the employees, including former Chief Executive Jack Craig, were using stolen information to set up a rival company, Craig Wire Products LLC.
The suit even claimed that the employees — the others were Brett Portwood, Brad Archambeau and Linda Belcher — remotely accessed confidential information on Von Roll computers in its plant in Rotterdam.
Belcher and Archambeau are former managers at Von Roll's Rotterdam plant, court papers say.
On Friday, Von Roll in a written statement said "all claims and counterclaims in the case have now been settled and the lawsuit will be discontinued in its entirety." (more)
Friday, November 7, 2008
Cops Tap Business Phones and Sell Info
India - A senior official in the Home department said an officer in the Special Task Force (STF) and an (an officer) in-charge of the Special Operation Group (SOG) in Varanasi have helped several contractors to grab lucrative business in Lucknow, Noida and Varanasi by prying on the conversations of their rivals through this system (legal wiretap equipment used against criminals).
These cops eavesdropped on tender details discussed by the rivals and alerted their contracted friends so that they could bid less.
The official said the fraud came to light after the harassed contractors approached the Home department and demanded to know how information was being leaked. Sources said they became suspicious after they lost several bids, the latest being one for a private mobile company. (more)
These cops eavesdropped on tender details discussed by the rivals and alerted their contracted friends so that they could bid less.
The official said the fraud came to light after the harassed contractors approached the Home department and demanded to know how information was being leaked. Sources said they became suspicious after they lost several bids, the latest being one for a private mobile company. (more)
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