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DoYouEverWonder
08-17-2009, 08:27 PM
the electronic voting machines?

Somehow I get the feeling this story is related?

Miami man indicted in largest-ever scheme to steal credit card numbers
A Miami native who is one of the nation's most well-known hackers is charged with stealing 130 million credit card numbers -- a case prosecutors are calling the largest ever.
BY ROB BARRY,
rbarry@MiamiHerald.com

Albert Gonzalez, the Miami cyberthief and former government informant who broke records last year in the largest credit card fraud case in U.S. history, shattered his own mark this week, prosecutors say. The 28-year-old hacker who launched his career cruising Dixie Highway with a laptop to break into the security systems of box stores was indicted Monday in New Jersey in an elaborate scheme to steal more than 130 million credit cards -- reselling them on the worldwide black market.

Known in dark corners of cyberspace as ``soupnazi,'' the Miami native was charged along with two unnamed defendants with targeting customers at convenience store giant 7-Eleven and supermarket chain Hannaford Brothers. The defendants also are accused of infiltrating the computers of a national credit card processing company.

Prosecutors said Gonzalez, who is already in jail awaiting trial in the earlier case, used a sophisticated hacking technique known as ``SQL injection'' to break into computer systems and steal credit and debit card records, sending the data to California, Illinois, Latvia, the Netherlands and Ukraine.

The data would then be printed on fresh cards and offered to thousands of buyers in cafes and nightclubs around the world.

Prosecutors said the case is the largest credit and debit card data breach ``ever charged in the United States.''

PREVIOUS INCIDENTS

The indictment represents the latest brush with the law for Gonzalez, a Cuban American high school graduate who became known to local hackers for his extraordinary computer skills and ability to navigate vast streams of data.

In 2003, he avoided a conviction for credit card theft in New Jersey by agreeing to become an informant for the U.S. Secret Service. But federal agents discovered in 2007 that the man they were using as a key operative was actually carrying out his own secret venture to steal millions of credit cards.

Armed with a laptop and a magnetic antenna, Gonzalez cruised along busy U.S. 1 in Miami tapping into the wireless networks of major retailers, including TJ Maxx, BJ's WholeSale Club, OfficeMax and Barnes & Noble, and stealing the records of sales made with a credit card, prosecutors say.

He was indicted along with 10 others in federal court in Boston for stealing more than 40 million credit cards -- the largest heist of its kind at the time.

Along the way, he amassed more than $1.65 million, a Miami condo, a BMW, a currency counter and a Glock 27. Prosecutors also said Gonzalez buried $1 million in the back yard of his parents' house in southwest Miami-Dade.

Two others from Miami charged in the case, Christopher Scott and Damon Patrick Toey, have since pleaded guilty.

SOPHISTICATED NETWORK

Since then, prosecutors say they discovered that those weren't the only computer crimes he was carrying out.

Gonzalez had also launched a plan to reap even more customer accounts in 2006 by tapping directly into a credit card processing computers that handle millions of transactions a day.

The alleged hackers picked their targets by looking at the list of Fortune 500 companies and going to stores to find out what type of payment systems were in place, court records say.

``This is historically the largest incident ever. You combine these two together, and this guy is like the Tony Montana of credit card theft,'' said Sean Arries, a security expert with Terremark, Inc. in Miami.

``It absolutely blows me away by the size of it.''

`A SELECT GROUP'

Investigators say Gonzalez and his network are among the most advanced they've encountered.

``We're not seeing a huge array of hackers capable of doing this, but rather a more select group, [and that] demonstrates that there is a level of sophistication involved in these hacks,'' said Assistant U.S. Attorney Erez Liebermann of the Justice Department's New Jersey district office.

Gonzalez's Miami attorney, Rene Palomino Jr., did not respond to requests for an interview.

No one answered the phone at Gonzalez's childhood home just west of Coral Gables on Monday evening.

Neighbors said they haven't seen Gonzalez for years, but that he grew up in the area, attending Coral Terrace Elementary School and South Miami Senior High.

``He was a really, really good kid,'' said one neighbor, who did not want to be identified.

Beyond the criminal case, Arries said the cases involving Gonzalez have already forced companies to better protect their customers' financial data and pay millions in settlements.

``It's the companies responsibility to secure this sort of information and they were doing a really bad job at it,'' Arries said. ``They left themselves vulnerable.''

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/story/1190587.html

DoYouEverWonder
08-17-2009, 08:54 PM
Finally remembered the story:


Mr. Fisher believes Dr. Blass is denying the public this crucial evidence in order to protect Joseph Klock, an attorney who facilitated the release of Dr. Blass' son from an abusive treatment center. Mr. Klock was, coincidentally, the attorney for former congresswoman Katherine Harris who was the Secretary of State during the contested 2000 Florida recount which helped put George W. Bush in the White House.

"Dr. Blass obtained this information when he was on the staff at Bay Point School," Fisher stated. Bay Point School is a juvenile correctional facility in the Miami area. "I was told the school is a suspected training ground in computer science and programming for juvenile delinquents who manipulate electronic voting, without a true audit trail. It is believed that this activity is taking place not only there but in several schools like these nationwide. If true, then Bay Point School could be the Florida connection."

Fisher alleges the school has direct connections with Joseph Klock, and that Blass informed him that his loyalty to Klock is more important than the truth about how the 2000 election was manipulated, and how it is possible for a repeat to occur in the upcoming November general election.

"This is unacceptable and, in my opinion, borders on treason," said Fisher, who was visibly upset that someone might help cover-up more election fraud in Florida. "Over the last few days I have been in direct contact with progressive investigative journalist Greg Palast of Gregpalast.com, with the information that was supposed to be delivered to Greg Palast," he added. "But the sender was told by Dr. Blass not to send it. I then informed Greg's senior researcher, Mr. Oliver, about this critical development. I have had partial information in my possession for the past three months. Unfortunately, Dr. Blass has prevented me from releasing it to the general public."

Fisher stated that Dr. Blass claimed his ex-wife had their son falsely imprisoned in a facility called Growing Together, located in Lake Worth, Florida. "Dr. Blass implored me for help to get his son released, which I was able to do without any thoughts of compensation whatsoever," Fisher said. "Then, during the next few months, Dr. Blass began telling me of this vital vote tampering information. Together, we developed a plan to get this information to John Kerry, and Dr. Blass asked me to contact Mr. Kerry through Charles Figley, a campaign liaison."

According to Fisher, those failed efforts influenced Dr. Blass to seek assistance from Klock.

"Dr. Blass is obstructing justice by withholding vital vote tampering information. I would greatly appreciate the help of the American Civil Liberty Union or a competent vote fraud investigator to address a serious and potentially ongoing voting problem in Florida.

http://tribes.tribe.net/democraticsocialists/thread/9943ad68-1d81-4b7b-bf4d-deeafbf66e0f