http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/a/AP-Military-Web-Fraud.html

N.J. Man Admits to Web Credit Theft

Filed at 8:27 a.m. EDT, May 17, 2000

By The Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -- A New Jersey man has
admitted to a scheme in which he used
personal information gleaned from the
Internet to create hundreds of fake credit
card accounts in the names of the nation's
highest-ranking military officers.

Lamar Christian, 32, of Trenton, N.J.,
pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court on
Tuesday to one count of conspiracy to commit
bank fraud. Federal prosecutors say Christian
created 331 fake credit accounts and used
them to buy $161,000 worth of computers and
jewelry online.

The cards were set up in the names of many of
the nation's highest-ranking officers,
including former Army Gen. John
Shalikashvili, who was President Clinton's
top military adviser until he retired in
1997.

Christian told U.S. District Judge Sue L.
Robinson that he got the names and Social
Security numbers from a Web site run by Glen
Roberts, a Pennsylvania privacy advocate.

Roberts said he got the information from the
Congressional Record, which published the
Social Security numbers and names of
high-ranking officers when they were
promoted. He said he publishes the Social
Security numbers on his Web site to prove how
easy it is to get such private information
from public sources.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Beth Moskow-Schnoll
told Robinson the Congressional Record no
longer publishes the Social Security numbers
of newly promoted officers. But the
Congressional Record accounts of previous
promotions still are available online with
names and Social Security numbers, Roberts
said.

Another man, Nevison Stevens, 29, of Trenton,
pleaded guilty in the case earlier this year.
Both men face up to four years in prison when
they are sentenced. Christian is to be
sentenced Aug. 3, Stevens on June 22.

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