I Was a Cybercrook for the FBI 72
Hoi Polloi writes "Wired News has a series starting on internet crime. The first piece they have up covers the story of a cybercrook who specialized in credit card fraud. Caught in a sting operation in November of 2002, the man who identified himself as 'El Mariachi' on message boards would lead a double life for the next two years working for the FBI. As he reported on credit card scammers, dodged his former associates, and stopped criminals from defrauding the 2004 presidential campaign, he also tried to keep his life together. A fascinating tale that looks at the face of modern crime, and crime-stopping techniques."
I was a lying media whore (Score:5, Insightful)
Translation: this guy made it all up and sold his story to Wired, the Weekly World News for techies.
Re:I was a lying media whore (Score:4, Insightful)
At least they managed to note that logs say whatever the person who writes them wants them to say. How many juries get to learn that at trial?
Re:I was a lying media whore (Score:5, Interesting)
Any jury at the trial of a defandant who has a decent lawyer? There are strict rules for computer evidence. You need to be able to account for everyone that potentially had access to the data. Any basic computer security course will tell you how easy it is to have electronic evidence thrown out of court.
Re:I was a lying media whore (Score:5, Interesting)
The fact that they do in fact commit identity theft on a fairly massive level, does not change the fact that most of them are try hard drug addicts. Script kiddies of the fraud world.
Most of these people are not capable of being simultaneously meticulously cautious, and exceedingly ambitious. The amount of precautions they take WILL hurt the ammount of business they can do. Caution to the point of staying out of jail involves keeping an extremely low profile, not getting greedy, and resultingly: never making it big. The people who make it big and try to cash out never can.
Criminals are by nature lazy.
Forum scheming is hardly the same thing as a conspiracy that is about to be acted upon. I doubt they got further than analyzing the technical concerns.
Last I heard about "El": once his handlers had no further use for him, they threw him to the wolves of some state cops in regards to some past warrants he aparently never resolved. Good riddance. He was just another one of them till he got caught and they leaned on him. Then he folded like a napkin, became their tool, and started a "new leaf."
Just goes to show the environment makes the man. I wonder how many of you people who scorn criminals would hold your ground if the tables were turned? Would you serve 10 years to keep your conscience clean? It's the same disdain straight A students have for cheaters. Do your thing, but no matter how much hassle these idiots cause you, karmas a bitch, and they dig their own grave 10X deeper.
Feel sorry for them if anything. It's the Christian thing to do.[sic]
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I wonder how many of you people who scorn criminals would hold your ground if the tables were turned? Would you serve 10 years to keep your conscience clean?
What the hell does that even mean?
Feel sorry for them if anything. It's the Christian thing to do.[sic]
Too bad there aren't many Christians in this country.
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What the hell does that even mean?
It means, if you were caught for "downloading" and offered a "deal", would you "work" for the Feds, or do the time.
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TFA implies that the crooks tried to defraud campaign contributers, not hack the polls. Though stealing money intended for a presidential campaign could indirectly affect the votes, assuming the banks/credit card companies refuse to reimburse the funds.
If You Want To Stop Crime: +1, Helpful (Score:1, Funny)
Thanks for your help,
Kilgore Trout
Dog Joke (Score:5, Funny)
He rings the bell and the owner tells him the dog is in the backyard. The guy goes into the backyard and sees a black mutt just sitting there.
"You talk?" he asks.
"Yep," the mutt replies.
"So, what's your story?"
The mutt looks up and says, "Well, I discovered this gift pretty young and I wanted to help the government, so I told the
CIA about my gift, and in no time they had me jetting from country to country, sitting in rooms with spies and world leaders, because no one figured a dog would be eavesdropping. I was one of their most valuable spies eight years running."
"The jetting around really tired me out, and I knew I wasn't getting any younger and I wanted to settle down. So I
signed up for a job at the airport to do some undercover security work, mostly wandering near suspicious characters and listening in. I uncovered some incredible dealings there and was awarded a batch of medals. Had a wife, a mess of puppies, and now I'm just retired."
The guy is amazed. He goes back in and asks the owner what he wants for the dog.
The owner says, "Ten dollars."
The guy says, "This dog is amazing. Why on earth are you selling him so cheap?"
The owner replies, "He's such a liar. He didn't do any of that stuff."
Re:I was a lying media whore (Score:4, Funny)
Did they pay by credit card?
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I RTFA.... the first page at least.... (Score:4, Funny)
Resentful of the control? C'mon, man, you didn't do a day in the slammer, and they could've locked you up tight. So, instead, you're basically outing the russian mafia?
Right then. Good luck, it's been nice knowing you.
Interesting article, but I call BS.
Re:I RTFA.... the first page at least.... (Score:4, Informative)
Next time you might want to read the whole FA:
Thomas began his work for the FBI five months after his Issaquah arrest and after serving three months in jail.
Then, two months later Taylor was jailed in Colorado on new charges unrelated to the Issaquah bust. He served eleven months before being released in May 2004.
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Still, 14 months is less than I'd expect if I were to duplicate his crimes.
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American hacker helps bust Russian cyber crime (Score:5, Funny)
remake? (Score:3, Funny)
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This revolved around fraudulent checks, not credit cards. From Imdb.com :
"An FBI agent tracks down and catches a young con artist who successfully impersonated an airline pilot, doctor, assistant attorney general and history professor, cashing more than $2.5 million in fraudulent checks in 26 countries."
Stainless Steal Rat? (Score:5, Funny)
Clever (Score:5, Funny)
2. Script kiddies apply for FBI jobs en masse
3. Busted!
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I have read a very lengthy (and officially verified) report from a ex-famous hacker of years ago, who had a very different experience than this fellow. He was locked up in low security for a long time with other non-violent criminals, and he was forbidden to use computers during his parole, and for some time after his release. His phone access was also severely restricted.
He highly advised potential young hackers to realize that it isn't any fun when you get caught, and
Not necessarily funny ... (Score:1)
SNITCHES! (Score:2, Interesting)
Snitches get punked in prison.They are lowest on the food chain next to pedophiles and have a low survival rate.
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All three have large targets painted on them if they get thrown into jail.
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Bad Pun (Score:2, Funny)
I guess you could say that the 2004 election wasn't 'stolen' after all.
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It wasn't stolen. They're just borrowing it until 2008.
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Wait a minute (Score:1, Offtopic)
He stopped them, huh? I guess all those irregularities in Ohio must have been just coincidence...
Re:Wait a minute (Score:4, Funny)
That's a lot different than defrauding an election.
The long tail of cybercrime (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, this is true of all crime: the scarce resources of law enforcement are generally allocated to the relatively small number of big crimes, while the much larger number of petty crimes are often left untouched. I'd guess that this is particularly true of cybercrime, where the law enforcement resources are more scarce, the big crimes are bigger, and the little crimes like "petty" identity theft are a drop in the bucket. Identity theft is hardly petty to the victim, however, it can ruin their finances and credit for years, and takes tremendous amounts of work to clear up, even when you are lucky enough to not get stuck with the bill.
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A friend's inlaws lost $750,000 in retirement funds, and the County DA wouldn't prosecut the case. It was too small and would take too many attorney hours over a long time compared to the workload in the particular county (So.Cal.).
Bo
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Yeah, the most appalling thing in this article to me is how much trouble "Campbell" had getting his money back from Schwab, when apparently they already knew that a scammer had been arrested trying to withdraw it in Brussels. And this was over $100,000, hardly "petty" by any personal finance standards. The details are slightly foggy and
The Hollies (Score:5, Funny)
Workin' for the FBI
Chattin' in a nest of bad hax0rz
Cans of Ensure piled up high
EFNet channel on a west server
Fulla lamez0rz who were doing wrong
Just about to email my G-G-Man
When my browser showed a woman's thong
A pair of double-Ds made me open my eyes
My temperature started to rise
She was a big breasted woman with a web cam
From an online porno mall
I just forgot about those bad men
'Cause that big breasted woman had it all
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Although, the review at Amazon says:
Has to be said. (Score:3, Funny)
Almost like a crime novel (Score:2)
2004 election (Score:1)
Well, thank God for that. We certainly wouldn't have wanted the general population to become aware of the highly flawed vote-recording and counting systems in use.
People might have noticed wide-spread problems, but who cares about a few hiccups in Ohio and Florida?
"stopped criminals from defrauding the 2004..." (Score:4, Insightful)
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Can't do the time, don't do the crime (Score:2, Insightful)
Just like Old-Time Radio (Score:1)
So I personally will not RTFA until it has been adapted into a radio drama with hilariously over the top voice acting.
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So I personally will not RTFA until it has been adapted into a radio drama with hilariously over the top voice acting.
How about if they do it as a TV miniseries revival of "I Led Three Lives"? :-)
FBI - You missed something. (Score:3, Insightful)
--
Captain Obvious
FBI sez yur under the limit (Score:4, Interesting)
It was nice of the FBI to tell us this limit. Now we know how much we can go for without attracting Sculley and Mulder.
My Story (Score:1)
'da Shadow knows... (Score:2)