1995-09-12 - Re: GAK/weak crypto rationale?

Header Data

From: Brian Davis <bdavis@thepoint.net>
To: Andrew Spring <Andrew.Spring@ping.be>
Message Hash: 6e8defdd5a9b98b56975b3ba5fef2831fcbfa1f612d447ba55d3708793c30d5c
Message ID: <Pine.D-G.3.91.950912174515.23949C-100000@dg.thepoint.net>
Reply To: <v01510100ac7a4e673a66@[193.74.217.13]>
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-12 21:45:29 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 12 Sep 95 14:45:29 PDT

Raw message

From: Brian Davis <bdavis@thepoint.net>
Date: Tue, 12 Sep 95 14:45:29 PDT
To: Andrew Spring <Andrew.Spring@ping.be>
Subject: Re: GAK/weak crypto rationale?
In-Reply-To: <v01510100ac7a4e673a66@[193.74.217.13]>
Message-ID: <Pine.D-G.3.91.950912174515.23949C-100000@dg.thepoint.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


On Tue, 12 Sep 1995, Andrew Spring wrote:

> >intercepts requested and authorized in the past year.  As I recall, the
> >number was quite small - around 12K [?].  Someone had found this out
> >through an FOIA request, perhaps, (my recollection of it is poor). It was
> 
> I think it's about 1200.
> 
> >not a large number, anyway.  I must conclude that the actual number of
> >intercepts is much, much larger than they are saying, and that they must
> >be getting what they perceive to be good intel from all this snooping.
> >
> 
> A more cautious conclusion would be would be that the importance (to the
> LEA's) of the busts made with crypto is much larger than the numbers
> suggest.  You could interpret that a lot of ways:  I suspect that
> high-profile career-enhancing cases are highly dependent on wiretaps.

No question.  Many high profile public corruption, Mafia, and high-level 
narcotics trafficking cases are made with wiretaps.  In our district, we 
managed to convict almost 20 people in an investigation of the state 
legislature, including the now-former Speaker of the House and > 6 other 
legislators.  Bribing lobbyists took hits, etc.

Particularly effective were the court-approved video and audio tapes of 
the Speaker taking a bribe in exchange for certain action on legislation 
and responding to the bribing party:   "Well bless your heart."
That has become the office's mantra.

I understand the same was true of the South Carolina state legislature 
investigation (wiretaps). 

A number of previous investigations of our legislature failed over the 
past 15 years as the stonewall held.  Wiretaps, hidden microphones, and 
hidden cameras put corrupt politicians (I know - redundant) out of business.

I don't doubt that wiretaps may sometimes be abused despite the 
incredibly onerous review process, but they have positive aspects, too.

Not a lawyer on the Net, although I play one in real life.
**********************************************************
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