In a message dated 03/26/2000 11:18:12 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< > FBI EXPERT ACCUSED OF HACKING
 >  h
 ttp:
 //ww
 w.sf
 gate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/03/24/MN57003.DTL

 0000000000000000000000000000000000000

 FBI Computer Expert Accused of Hacking
  htt
 p://
 www.
 sfga
 te.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/03/24/MN57003.DTL
 Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer
 Friday, March 24, 2000
 C2000 San Francisco Chronicle
 Page A19

 Max Ray Butler seemed to be at the top of his game.
 For two years, the computer expert was a confidential
 source for an elite FBI computer crime squad, helping
 to ferret out scofflaws on the Internet.

 Butler, also known as Max Vision, was also a
 self-described ``ethical hacker'' from the Silicon
 Valley who boasted that he could test the security
 of any computer system by penetrating it.

 But Butler's cyber activity went too far, federal
 authorities say.

 Butler, 27, of Berkeley appeared in federal
 court in San Jose yesterday on a 15-count federal
 indictment charging him with hacking into computers
 used by the University of California at Berkeley,
 national laboratories, federal departments, air
 force bases across the country and a NASA flight
 center.

 Butler posted $50,000 cash bail yesterday after
 U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia Turnbull ordered
 him not to use computers except for work. Butler
 and his attorney, Jennifer Granick of San Francisco,
 could not be reached for comment.

 The indictment, handed down March 15, said Butler
 caused ``reckless damage'' as a result of intrusions
 in May 1998. Butler was also charged with possession,
 with intent to defraud, of 477 passwords belonging
 to customers of a Santa Clara- based Internet service
 provider.

 The case underscores the potential risks involved
 when law-enforcement agencies use confidential
 informants with access to sensitive information.

 ``Sources are often very close to criminal activity,
 and sometimes they cross the line,'' said Special
 Agent George Grotz, an FBI spokesman in San Francisco.

 Grotz declined to say how Butler became an FBI
 informant and whether he was a federal source at the
 time of the alleged crimes. Grotz said Butler is no
 longer associated with the agency.

 Friends of the suspect told the Associated Press that
 Butler was caught possibly violating the law several
 years ago and began working with the FBI to avoid
 charges. Seth Alves, 27, told the news agency that
 Butler was unfairly targeted after refusing to comply
 with an FBI request.

 A 22-month investigation by the FBI and military
 investigators ended Tuesday morning when federal
 agents converged on a home on Dwight Way near the
 UC Berkeley campus, where Butler lives with his his
 23-year-old wife, Kimi Winters. No one answered the
 door. Butler turned himself in to the FBI in Oakland
 later that day.

 Butler grew up in Idaho and lived with his family
 in Washington, where authorities said he has a 1997
 misdemeanor conviction for attempted trafficking of
 stolen property.

 He developed a proficiency with computers, eventually
 attracting the attention of the FBI's Computer Crime
 Squad, which used him as a confidential informant.

 An FBI search warrant affidavit said Butler was
 ``well known'' to squad members and ``has provided
 useful and timely information on computer crimes in
 the past.''

 In 1997, Butler started a company known as Max Vision
 in Mountain View, specializing in ``penetration testing''
 and ``ethical hacking'' procedures in which he would
 simulate for clients how a hacker would penetrate their
 computer systems, according to the company Web site.

 ``Our client penetration rate is currently 100 percent,''
 the site said, with recent clients including a large
 consortium of telecommunications companies, a major
 motion picture company and an e-commerce online auction
 service.

 By 1998, Butler was living with Winters in a one-story
 San Jose apartment, where the couple started up their
 own Web-design company, Kimi Networks, records show.
 Reached by telephone yesterday, Winters hung up on a
 Chronicle reporter.

 It was also from that apartment, according to the FBI,
 that Butler hacked into computers by using a computer
 software vulnerability known as a buffer overflow, which
 sends commands into a system that ordinarily would not
 be allowed.

 Butler also allegedly invaded computers used by the
 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Vern Paxson, a
 computer scientist at the lab, noticed an online intruder
 conducting unauthorized scans of laboratory and UC Berkeley
 computers in May 1998 and used a monitoring device that
 later helped identify the source of the intrusions.

 Paxson said yesterday that Butler's arrest was
 ``somewhat ironic'' but ``not totally surprising.''

 Paxson said a person later identified as Butler even sent
 him an apologetic e-mail a day after the computer intrusions.
 Butler also somehow obtained a confidential incident report
 Paxton had filed about the invasions, Paxson said.

 C2000 San Francisco Chronicle
 Page A19

 0000000000000000000000000000000000000

 *** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
 Section 107, this material is distributed
 without profit to SPYNEWS eGroup members who
 have expressed a prior interest in receiving
 the included information for non-profit research
 and educational purposes only.

 For more information go to:
 http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

 Mario Profaca,
 SPY NEWS eGroup list owner,
 editor & moderator
 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >>



Mario's Cyberspace Station
http://mprofaca.cro.net/mainmenu.html
-__ ___ _ ___ __ ___ _ _ _ __
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\_'\''_/\'/|'\\'|'_||'V'V'\_'\
|__/_|'.//'|_|\_|___|\_n_/|__/
Sunday, March 26, 2000

Thanks, Leonard, for this link

Mario

/===[ Message to spynews ]====\
> From: "Leonard t. Dotson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Spy News] Hacking credit cards is preposterously easy
> Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 07:49:49 -0700

> FBI EXPERT ACCUSED OF HACKING
>  h
ttp:
//ww
w.sf
gate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/03/24/MN57003.DTL

0000000000000000000000000000000000000

FBI Computer Expert Accused of Hacking
 htt
p://
www.
sfga
te.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/03/24/MN57003.DTL
Henry K. Lee, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, March 24, 2000
C2000 San Francisco Chronicle
Page A19

Max Ray Butler seemed to be at the top of his game.
For two years, the computer expert was a confidential
source for an elite FBI computer crime squad, helping
to ferret out scofflaws on the Internet.

Butler, also known as Max Vision, was also a
self-described ``ethical hacker'' from the Silicon
Valley who boasted that he could test the security
of any computer system by penetrating it.

But Butler's cyber activity went too far, federal
authorities say.

Butler, 27, of Berkeley appeared in federal
court in San Jose yesterday on a 15-count federal
indictment charging him with hacking into computers
used by the University of California at Berkeley,
national laboratories, federal departments, air
force bases across the country and a NASA flight
center.

Butler posted $50,000 cash bail yesterday after
U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia Turnbull ordered
him not to use computers except for work. Butler
and his attorney, Jennifer Granick of San Francisco,
could not be reached for comment.

The indictment, handed down March 15, said Butler
caused ``reckless damage'' as a result of intrusions
in May 1998. Butler was also charged with possession,
with intent to defraud, of 477 passwords belonging
to customers of a Santa Clara- based Internet service
provider.

The case underscores the potential risks involved
when law-enforcement agencies use confidential
informants with access to sensitive information.

``Sources are often very close to criminal activity,
and sometimes they cross the line,'' said Special
Agent George Grotz, an FBI spokesman in San Francisco.

Grotz declined to say how Butler became an FBI
informant and whether he was a federal source at the
time of the alleged crimes. Grotz said Butler is no
longer associated with the agency.

Friends of the suspect told the Associated Press that
Butler was caught possibly violating the law several
years ago and began working with the FBI to avoid
charges. Seth Alves, 27, told the news agency that
Butler was unfairly targeted after refusing to comply
with an FBI request.

A 22-month investigation by the FBI and military
investigators ended Tuesday morning when federal
agents converged on a home on Dwight Way near the
UC Berkeley campus, where Butler lives with his his
23-year-old wife, Kimi Winters. No one answered the
door. Butler turned himself in to the FBI in Oakland
later that day.

Butler grew up in Idaho and lived with his family
in Washington, where authorities said he has a 1997
misdemeanor conviction for attempted trafficking of
stolen property.

He developed a proficiency with computers, eventually
attracting the attention of the FBI's Computer Crime
Squad, which used him as a confidential informant.

An FBI search warrant affidavit said Butler was
``well known'' to squad members and ``has provided
useful and timely information on computer crimes in
the past.''

In 1997, Butler started a company known as Max Vision
in Mountain View, specializing in ``penetration testing''
and ``ethical hacking'' procedures in which he would
simulate for clients how a hacker would penetrate their
computer systems, according to the company Web site.

``Our client penetration rate is currently 100 percent,''
the site said, with recent clients including a large
consortium of telecommunications companies, a major
motion picture company and an e-commerce online auction
service.

By 1998, Butler was living with Winters in a one-story
San Jose apartment, where the couple started up their
own Web-design company, Kimi Networks, records show.
Reached by telephone yesterday, Winters hung up on a
Chronicle reporter.

It was also from that apartment, according to the FBI,
that Butler hacked into computers by using a computer
software vulnerability known as a buffer overflow, which
sends commands into a system that ordinarily would not
be allowed.

Butler also allegedly invaded computers used by the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Vern Paxson, a
computer scientist at the lab, noticed an online intruder
conducting unauthorized scans of laboratory and UC Berkeley
computers in May 1998 and used a monitoring device that
later helped identify the source of the intrusions.

Paxson said yesterday that Butler's arrest was
``somewhat ironic'' but ``not totally surprising.''

Paxson said a person later identified as Butler even sent
him an apologetic e-mail a day after the computer intrusions.
Butler also somehow obtained a confidential incident report
Paxton had filed about the invasions, Paxson said.

C2000 San Francisco Chronicle
Page A19

0000000000000000000000000000000000000

*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to SPYNEWS eGroup members who
have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for non-profit research
and educational purposes only.

For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

Mario Profaca,
SPY NEWS eGroup list owner,
editor & moderator
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

0000000000000000000000000000000000000



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|__/_|'.//'|_|\_|___|\_n_/|__/
http://mprofaca.cro.net/latest.html

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