1993-10-06 - Re: BBS seizures

Header Data

From: greg@ideath.goldenbear.com (Greg Broiles)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: cbb136a617afde634d203dd17c3f432008aeacf783437a5ae301510b7a3c34c1
Message ID: <R9kZac1w164w@ideath.goldenbear.com>
Reply To: <DL2Vac1w164w@ideath.goldenbear.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-10-06 11:20:22 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 6 Oct 93 04:20:22 PDT

Raw message

From: greg@ideath.goldenbear.com (Greg Broiles)
Date: Wed, 6 Oct 93 04:20:22 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: BBS seizures
In-Reply-To: <DL2Vac1w164w@ideath.goldenbear.com>
Message-ID: <R9kZac1w164w@ideath.goldenbear.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


uunet!ideath.goldenbear.com!greg (Greg Broiles) writes:

> I think a man named Tom Tcimpidis was busted in the L.A. area in the early
> eighties because of content; if I remember the facts correctly, codes
> were posted to his board without his knowledge, and he was convicted for 
> illegal possession of long distance access codes. I grepped through early 

I did more checking. Tcimpidis was arrested in May 1984 when an access code 
was posted to his BBS while he was on vacation. Charges were dropped in 1985 
because there was insufficient evidence to establish that he knew that the 
code was there. One person mentioned in E-mail that Tcimpidis' equipment
was returned to him, albeit in a damaged condition.

Publication of a telephone credit card number is a misdemeanor in California 
if it is done "with the intent that it be used or with knowledge or reason 
to believe it will be used" for toll fraud. CA Penal Code Section 
502.7(1)(c). Publication means (for these purposes) communicating the number
to at least one other person either orally or in writing of any kind.

I'll leave this subject alone now; just wanted to correct earlier mistake 
about Tcimpidis.


--
Greg Broiles
greg@goldenbear.com                     Baked, not fried.





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