| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Three, Issue 26, File 3 of 11 |
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| = %> The Disk Jockey <% = |
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| = Presents = |
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| = Getting Caught = |
| - - Legal Procedures - - |
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| - March 24, 1989 - |
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| - An Unbiased Look Into The Ways Of Criminal Proceedings - |
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| Preface |
| %%%%%%% |
| Through this file, I hope to explain what legal action is followed during |
| an investigation of toll fraud. All of the contained information is based upon |
| actual factual information, and although it differs slightly from state to |
| state, the majority of it is applicable anywhere. There seems to be a lot of |
| misconception as to the actual legal happenings during and after an |
| investigation, so hopefully this will answer some of the too often unasked |
| questions. |
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| Initiation |
| %%%%%%%%%% |
| In our particular story, the whole investigation is tipped off from a |
| phone call by someone to the U.S. Sprint security office. The volume of calls |
| of "hackers" calling in on other "hackers" is incredible. It is amazing how |
| when one user is mad at another and seeks some "revenge" of sorts, he calls a |
| security office and advises them that they know of a person who is illegally |
| using said company's long distance services. Usually the person will talk to |
| either a regular customer service representative, or someone from the security |
| office. Typically they will merely say "Hey, a guy named 'Joe' is using your |
| codes that he hacks, and his home phone number is 312-xxx-xxxx." |
| Next our security person has to decide if this may indeed be a somewhat |
| legitimate call. If all seems fairly reasonable, they will start their own |
| in-house investigation. This could mean just doing a CN/A on the phone number |
| in question to see who the phone is registered under, and check to see if this |
| person is a legitimate subscriber to their system. |
| A call is placed to the person in question's home telco office. Usually |
| they will talk to someone in the security office, or a person whom would carry |
| such a capacity in the area of security. They will usually coordinate an |
| effort to put some type of DNR (Dialed Number Recorder) on the subscriber's |
| telephone line, which will record on an adding machine type of paper all data |
| pertaining to: Numbers dialed, DTMF or pulse modes, any occurrence of 2600hz, |
| codes and other digits dialed, incoming calls including number of rings before |
| answer, time the line was picked up and hung up, etc. |
| This DNR may sit on the subscriber's phone line from merely a few weeks, |
| to several months. |
| At some point either the U.S. Sprint security representative or the telco |
| security person will decide that enough time has passed, and that an analysis |
| of the DNR tape is due. The Sprint official may visit the telco site and go |
| over the tapes in person, or they may be sent from the telco to the Sprint |
| office. |
| After going over the tapes and finding dialups and codes that were used |
| that may possibly be used illegally, Sprint will find the actual owners of |
| the codes in question and verify that the codes were indeed used without any |
| knowledge or permission of the legitimate owner. They will also put together |
| an estimate of "damages," which can include cost of dialup port access, cost |
| of investigation, as well as the actual toll charges incurred from the |
| usage. |
| The Sprint security representative and the local telco security person |
| will then go to the local police, usually either state or whatever has the real |
| power in that area. They will present the case to the detective or other |
| investigator, display all findings, and provided that the case findings seem |
| pretty plausible, a search warrant will be composed. After the warrant is |
| fully written out (sometimes it is merely a short fill-in-the-blank form) the |
| three people investigating the case (the police detective, the local telco |
| security representative, and the Sprint security investigator) will go in front |
| of a judge and under oath state the evidence and findings that they have as to |
| date contained in a document called a "discovery" which justify the need for a |
| search warrant. Assuming that the findings seem conclusive, the judge will |
| sign the warrant and it will then be active for the time specified on the |
| warrant. Usually they are valid for 24 hours a day, due to the circumstances |
| that more than likely calls were being made at all hours of the day and night. |
| On some agreed date, all the above parties will show up at the suspect's |
| house and execute the search warrant and more than likely collect all the phone |
| and computer equipment and bring it to the state police post for further |
| investigation. |
| All information and evidence as well as all the reports will then be |
| forwarded to the prosecutor's office to determine what, if any, charges are |
| going to be pursued. |
| Once charges are finalized through the prosecutor, another discovery |
| document is made, listing all the charges and how those charges were derived. |
| It is then brought in front of the judge again and if approved, warrants will |
| be issued for the individual(s) listed. |
| The warrants are usually served by sending over one of the local officers |
| to the suspect's house, and he will knock, introduce himself and ask for the |
| individual, and then present the warrant to the individual and take them in to |
| the station. |
| The individual will be processed, which usually means being photographed |
| and fingerprinted twice (once for the FBI and once for the state records), and |
| then is put into either a holding cell or regular jail. |
| Sometimes the bond is already set before the individual is arrested, but |
| sometimes it is not. If not, it will be at the arraignment. |
| Within 72 hours, the suspect must be arraigned. The arraignment is a time |
| when the formal charges are read to the suspect in front of the judge, bail is |
| set if it has not been already, and the suspect may pick if he wants a jury |
| trial or a trial by judge. This, of course, assumes that the suspect is going |
| to plead not guilty, which is the best thing to do in most cases of somewhat |
| major capacity. Further court dates are also set at this time. If the suspect |
| is unable to afford to retain an attorney, the court will assign a court |
| appointed lawyer at this time. |
| After the arraignment, the suspect is either allowed to post bail, or is |
| returned to the jail to await the next court date. His next court date, |
| which is the omnibus, is usually slated for about a month away. |
| If the set bail seems unreasonably high, your attorney can file for a |
| "bond reduction." You will go in front of the judge and your lawyer will argue |
| as to why your bond should be reduced, and how you have a stable life and |
| responsibilities and would not try to skip bail. The prosecutor will argue as |
| to why your bail should not be dropped. |
| At the omnibus hearing, also known as a "fact-finding" hearing (or in some |
| states, this is known as the "preliminary hearing."--Ed.) the suspect is again |
| brought in front of a judge, along with his own attorney, and the prosecuting |
| attorney. At this time the state (meaning the prosecutor) will reveal evidence |
| against the suspect, and the judge will decide if the evidence is enough to |
| hold the suspect in jail or to continue the case to trial. Nearly always there |
| is enough, as warrants would not be issued if there was not, since the state |
| could be opening themselves up to a false arrest suit if they were wrong. From |
| here a "pre-trial" date is slated, again usually about a month down the road. |
| The pre-trial is the last chance for the suspect to change his mind and |
| enter a guilty plea, or to continue to trial. It is also the last point in |
| which the prosecutor will offer the suspect any type of plea-bargain, meaning |
| that the suspect enters a guilty plea in exchange for an agreed upon set of |
| reduced charges or sentencing. Assuming the suspect still wishes to enter a |
| plea of "not-guilty," the date for jury selection will be slated. |
| During the jury selection, your lawyer and you as well as the prosecutor |
| will get to meet as many prospective jury members as you wish, and you can each |
| ask them questions and either accept or reject them based on if you think that |
| they would be fair towards you. This eliminates most possibilities of any jury |
| members that are biases before they every sit down to hear your case. After |
| the prosecutor and your attorney agree on the members, your trial date is set, |
| usually about a week later. |
| At trial, the prosecutor will present the case to the jury, starting with |
| questioning detectives and investigators on how the case was first discovered |
| and how things lead to you, and in each instance, your attorney will be able to |
| "cross-examine" each witness and ask questions of their own, hopefully making |
| the jury questionable as to the validity of everything that is said. After |
| that, your attorney is allowed to call witnesses and the prosecutor will be |
| allowed to ask questions as well. By rights you do not have to go to the stand |
| if you do not want to, as you have the right to not incriminate yourself. After |
| all is said and done, the prosecutor will get to state his "closing arguments," |
| a basic summary of all that was presented and why you should be considered |
| guilty, and your lawyer will give his arguments to the jury, as to why you |
| should not be judged guilty. |
| The jury will go into deliberation, which can last a few minutes, or |
| several days. They must all vote and decide if you should be judged guilty or |
| not guilty. After the deliberation, court is called back in and the jury will |
| announce the results. |
| If it is decided that you are guilty, you normally have about 10 days to |
| file an appeal, which would have your case sent to a higher court. Otherwise |
| your date for sentencing will be set, again usually about a month away. |
| At the sentencing, your lawyer will argue why you should be let off easy, |
| and the prosecutor will argue why you should be given a hard sentence. The |
| judge will come to a decision based on the arguments and then make a decision |
| on your sentence. You will then be released to the agency that you are |
| assigned to, be it the probation department, the prison system, or the county |
| jail. |
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| I hope this file gives you a more clear view on what happens in the legal |
| system, in future files I hope to discuss the actual dos and don'ts of the |
| legal system and advise as to what tricks of the trade are used by legal |
| authorities. |
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| Any questions/comments/threats can be directed to me at; |
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| Lunatic Labs 415.278.7421 |
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| -The Disk Jockey |
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| Written exclusively for Phrack Newsletter, 1989. This document may be used in |
| whole or part as long as full credit for work cited is given to the author. |
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