Three add'l items:

1) Evans is debunked further by the good folks at Attrition.Org :  
http://attrition.org/errata/charlatan/gregory_evans/

2) Some in the security community are taking him to task for his 
actions/reputation today, including posting an alleged torrent archive of his 
corporate email account 
(http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/fulldisclosure/current/0015.html)


Judge rebukes 'World's No. 1 Hacker'

Quashes 'extremely troubling' subpoenas

By Dan Goodin in San Francisco • Get more from this author

Posted in Security, 31st January 2011 23:03 GMT

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/01/31/ligatt_security_subpoena_quashed/

A judge in Georgia has scolded a controversial security figure for improperly 
subpoenaing Yahoo! and Twitter in an attempt to get user names and passwords 
belonging to some 25 researchers.

Gregory D. Evans, CEO of Ligatt Security and the self-proclaimed "World's No. 1 
Hacker", sought the the highly personal information in a lawsuit he brought 
last year accusing the researchers of bashing his company's penny stock. Over 
the past year, shares have fallen from about $2.80 to $0.0004, public 
information shows. Most of that precipitous drop happened prior to claims that 
surfaced in June that huge chunks of an e-book purportedly written by Evans 
were lifted from other hacking manuals without the original authors' permission.

The suit named Chris John Riley, Ben Rothke, and other security professionals 
who publicly claimed their works were plagiarized. Shortly after it was filed, 
attorneys for Evans subpoenaed Yahoo! and Twitter for information that included 
the defendants' usernames, passwords, emails sent and received, and blog 
postings. Last week, the judge hearing the case squashed the subpoenas and said 
they violated several provisions of Georgia law.

“The court finds it extremely troubling that plaintiffs issued and served 
subpoenas to which plaintiffs' counsel had no access for such a long period of 
time,” Karen E. Beyers, superior court judge for Georgia's Gwinnett County 
wrote. Under the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, she said, Randolph Morris 
and the 24 other people named in the suit were entitled to copies.

She also uncovered other legal deficiencies, including their inclusion of the 
wrong case number and failure to notify plaintiffs that two subpoenas had been 
filed rather than just one. What's more, Beyers said the subpoenas were 
“overbroad” because they sought passwords and emails.

“This is exceedingly overbroad, and is also wholly inconsistent with the 
representations of plaintiffs' counsel regarding the scope of the subpoenas,” 
she wrote.

Beyers went on to dismiss Morris from the lawsuit because she found the 
California resident had no ties to Georgia. She scheduled a hearing for March 1 
to decide how much Evans should pay in sanctions for the improper subpoenas.

Shortly after filing his lawsuit in July, Evans cast himself as the aggrieved 
party.

“We are sure that once this total investigation is over we will find that not 
only were these people bashers, but they were also day traders and market 
makers,” Evans was quoted in a press release. “We are prepared to go after them 
due to the fact that they took part in manipulating the stock,” says Evans.

Evans has regularly appeared as a security expert on Fox News, Bloomberg TV, 
and CNN.
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