This is going to get huge.

Related story in the August 31st issue of From The Wilderness. It mails next
Friday - maybe sooner.

Mike Ruppert
www.copvcia.com
www.suppressedwriters.com


http://www.thestar.com/thestar/editorial/news/20000825NEW01_NA-SPY.html
SPY COMPUTER 'TRAP' PROBED
RIGGED SOFTWARE CLAIMED TO HACK INTELLIGENCE FILES
By Valerie Lawton and Allan Thompson
Toronto Star Ottawa Bureau
OTTAWA - The RCMP is conducting a probe related to allegations that foreign
spies used rigged software to hack into Canada's top secret intelligence
files.
A Star investigation has found the probe revolves around stunning claims
that computer software used by the Mounties and Canada's spy service to
co-ordinate secret investigations was rigged with a "trap door" to allow
American and Israeli agents to eavesdrop.
If this proves true, it would be the biggest ever breach of Canada's
national security.
Computer experts say a sophisticated trap door - essentially a computer
bug - can be impossible to find, even if you know it's there. They can be
hidden in either software, as a tiny bit of rogue code, or in the computer's
hardware, stored on a microchip.
While Canada already shares a wealth of intelligence information with the
U.S. and Israel, there are many elements of Canadian intelligence gathering
that the government wouldn't be anxious to share with allies.


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'We welcome any credible and serious investigation of this affair.'
* Bill Hamilton
Joint owner of Inslaw Inc., the Washington-based company that developed
Promis. He refused to say whether the Mounties have contacted him.
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That could include economic intelligence on trading partners, detailed
information on the whereabouts of terrorism suspects in Canada or strategic
information on the positions Canada intends to take in international
relations.
The RCMP would not formally confirm the existence of the probe by its
National Securities Investigation section.
"I cannot either confirm or deny what you're looking into," RCMP
spokesperson Sergeant Marc Richer said yesterday.
But sources close to the investigation say it revolves around Promis, a
software program first developed to assist prosecutors in the United States
Department of Justice. The case management software also has application for
intelligence agencies keeping track of surveillance and investigation files.
The Promis software was at the centre of a major U.S. scandal a decade ago.
Bill and Nancy Hamilton, owners of Washington-based Inslaw Inc., the company
that developed Promis, caused a sensation when they alleged the U.S.
government had stolen their software and pedalled pirated versions to
intelligence agencies around the world.
A former Israeli spy also alleged the software had been fitted with an
electronic trap door to allow American and Israeli agents to spy on those
who used the software.
After a series of contradictory court rulings and investigations, the story
dropped out of the headlines years ago. But now, a Star investigation has
found that a number of people linked to the Promis affair have been
interviewed by RCMP investigators in recent months.
Louis Buffardi, a lawyer who represents an American computer wizard, who
claims he helped prepare Promis software for sale to Canada, said his client
was interviewed by RCMP officers who said they are probing a possible breach
of Canada's national security.
A former stockbroker, John Belton, who lives in Eastern Ontario and has been
tracking the Promis case for years, said RCMP investigators have made
repeated trips to his home to conduct interviews on the subject.
Another player in the saga, who asked not to be identified, said RCMP
investigators have talked to him about their concerns that Canada's national
security may have been breached.
Sources said Bill Hamilton was among those interviewed by the RCMP. Reached
in Washington yesterday, Hamilton refused to say whether or not the Mounties
had talked to him, but said he was glad to hear there was an investigation.
"We welcome any credible and serious investigation of this affair," Hamilton
said.
The Promis case was never fully resolved in the U.S. but many regard it as
the domain of conspiracy theorists.
In 1987, a U.S. court upheld some of the software company's claims of stolen
software and found there was evidence the U.S. justice department used
"trickery, fraud and deceit," to steal the Promis software from Inslaw Inc.
That ruling was later overturned on procedural grounds. And in 1993, the
report of a retired judge hired to probe the matter concluded there was no
credible evidence the software had been stolen by the justice department.
(Inslaw's Promis software is still in use in some U.S. prosecutors' offices
and available for sale legitimately.)
The Canadian government entered the story - publicly, at least - in 1991.
That's when a federal bureaucrat called Inslaw with a routine request: Was
the Promis software, already in use by some government departments, also
available in French?
Trouble was, Inslaw hadn't sold its product to anyone in Canada.
Inslaw started asking questions in Ottawa, where officials quickly
backtracked. There had been a mix-up, they said, some confusion about the
name of the software.
Officials insisted at the time no government department was using Inslaw's
Promis.
Yesterday, RCMP Corporal Glen Kibsey refused to comment on whether the RCMP
uses Promis software.
A spokesperson for CSIS, the spy service, also refused to comment on what
software the agency uses, or the reports of an RCMP investigation.
U.S. embassy spokesperson Buck Shinkman said he was not aware of any RCMP
investigation, or any developments in the Promis file.
"I'm unaware of any renewed interest in this story," Shinkman said.
A spokesperson at the Israeli embassy could not be reached for comment.
The former Ontario stockbroker involved in Promis affair said he has been
interviewed by the Mounties numerous times over the last 18 months.
Belton said RCMP officers told him they are investigating whether the
Mounties have Inslaw's Promis software, if it was stolen, and whether the
security of the RCMP has been compromised as a result of trap doors in the
software.
He said he's aware some people will regard him as someone who lives in a
fantasy world of conspiracy theories and spooks.
"You're not dealing with paranoid crazies, or the UFO guys. I'm very serious
about this," Belton said.
He said the proof that his allegations are being taken seriously is the fact
that RCMP investigators have been coming to see him for 1 1/2 years to
discuss the evidence he has to offer.
Belton said RCMP officers have already confirmed to him that they do use the
Promis software and have told Hamilton his software was in use by the
Mounties.
The chainsmoking Belton unraveled his story at the kitchen table of his
sprawling, ramshackle house near Ottawa. The table is stacked with thick
binders jammed with documents detailing his allegations.
Court documents, detailed notes of telephone conversations and newspaper
clippings are marked up with highlighter and neatly organized.
In addition to Belton, an Illinois lawyer representing Riconoscuito - the
American computer whiz who has publicly claimed he helped prepare Inslaw's
Promis software for sale to Canada in 1983 and 1984 - said in an interview
that RCMP investigators talked to his client.
"I was first contacted by the RCMP, oh geez, eight or nine months ago,"
Riconoscuito's lawyer Louis Buffardi said.
Buffardi said the RCMP investigator told him the matter involved a possible
breach of Canada's national security.
Police were interested both in going over Riconoscuito's previous claims
about his involvement in modifying the Promis software, as well as asking
him about some new information, the lawyer said.
"Some of the modifications that I made were specifically designed to
facilitate the implementation of Promis with two agencies of Canada: the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service," Riconoscuito once said in a sworn affidavit.
Riconoscuito, who is currently being held at a federal prison in
Pennsylvania on drug charges, couldn't be reached for comment.
Another player in the saga, who asked not to be identified, also confirmed
he has been contacted by RCMP investigators who want to question him about
the Promis software.
But another person who sources claimed was on the RCMP interview list -
Madison Brewer, who managed the Promis software project at the U.S.
Department of Justice in the 1980s - said the allegations were fantasy.
"The people who make these accusations are just crazies," said Brewer,
insisting he has had no contact with the RCMP.
Brewer said the Promis software wasn't all that it was cracked up to be and
that Inslaw fomented the scandal as "a bunch of public relations crap."
The lead RCMP investigator working on the file, Sean McDade, was reached by
telephone this week but refused to divulge any information about the probe.
"You're putting me in a bad spot here. I can't comment on what's happening
right now," McDade said.
"There's issues that I am not able to talk about and have nothing to do with
what you're probably making inquiries about.
"It's a matter that is under investigation - not that Inslaw is under
investigation by any sense, but certain elements have just twigged my
interest and that's it. There is no official investigation that I can talk
to
you about right now."
McDade also warned reporters to be wary of the web of intrigue surrounding
the affair. "I kind of get a chuckle out of how something so small has been
blown out of proportion."
But a history of Israel's Mossad published last year suggests the software
did wind up in Canada.
In his book, Gideon's Spies, Welsh author Gordon Thomas recounts the tale of
how Rafi Eitan, former deputy director of operations at Mossad, claimed that
both Israel and the United States had sold modified Promis software to other
countries through front companies.
Another of the characters linked to the affair is Ari Ben-Menashe, a former
Israeli intelligence agent now living in Montreal. He claimed in his book,
Profits of War, that he played a role in having a trap door installed in the
Promis software, which was then distributed around the world. He wrote that
the Americans and the Israelis sold the doctored software to many countries,
including Canada, Britain, Australia, South Korea, Iraq, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia and Nicaragua.
In an interview, Ben-Menashe said Canadian authorities quizzed him about
Promis seven years ago in the course of security screening interviews after
he applied for Canadian citizenship.
But Ben-Menashe, who now runs a security consulting firm in Montreal, was
adamant that he has had no contact with the RCMP in connection with the
Promis affair.
While the Promis story line sounds like a Le Carre novel, intelligence
experts say it is not entirely implausible that some of Canada's close
allies would use software to spy on this country.
Even the RCMP officers investigating the affair use a mysterious electronic
mail address to pass messages. The e-mail address includes the word Promis,
spelled backwards - simorp.
Experts say a sophisticated trap door can be impossible to find. The trap
door code is tucked within hundreds of thousands of lines of programming
instructions.
A hacker can activate it with a specific set of key strokes and then use it
to download all the information on a database - completely undetected.
A micro-chip trap door would have to be implanted in the computer main
frame, likely replacing a chip that's actually supposed to be there.
It allows a hacker to used a modem to dial into the central computer and
pull out any interesting information stored there.






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