From: John Young <jya@pipeline.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: e630b182203080fc7518fc0e81d432521e3f53c2da2af84c1ace85df97964781
Message ID: <1.5.4.32.19970520173416.008a2f4c@pop.pipeline.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-05-20 17:58:07 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 21 May 1997 01:58:07 +0800
From: John Young <jya@pipeline.com>
Date: Wed, 21 May 1997 01:58:07 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Jim Bell 2
Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970520173416.008a2f4c@pop.pipeline.com>
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The Oregonian, May 20, 1997, Metro Section P-1:
IRS says suspect discussed sabotage
An affidavit says a Vancouver man arrested Friday talked of
sabotaging Portland's 9-1-1 computer and Bull Run water
By John Painter, Jr., of the Oregonian staff
Vancouver, Wash. -- A Vancouver man arrested Friday by Internal
Revenue agents discussed sabotaging the computers in Portland's
9-1-1 center and talked about using a botulism toxin to contaminate
the Bull Run water supply, a federal agent said Monday.
James Dalton Bell, 38, appeared Monday afternoon in U.S. District
Court in Tacoma and was accused in an 18-page affidavit of scheming
to overthrow the U.S. government.
U.S. Magistrate J. Kelly Arnold set Friday for a detention and
preliminary hearing. The government has asked that Bell be held
without bail because he is a danger to the community.
Bell, who describes himself as a libertarian, has a history of tax
disputes with the IRS, which says Bell "has a large, outstanding unpaid
balance."
Bell is the author of "Assassination Politics," a 10-part essay about a
risk-free way of rewarding assassins who successfully kill designated
public officials. The essay has circulated on the Internet.
The strategy, which Bell says he wrote and posted for discussion,
involves uses of encryption to predict and confirm assassinations and
electronic digital cash to pay for the killings.
Federal agents raided Bell's Vancouver home April 1.
He is accused of obstructing government officers and employees and
using false Social Security numbers. But government agents think he
is far more dangerous than the charges suggest, the affidavit filed by
IRS Inspector Phillip G. Scott said.
Scott's affidavit said Bell, who has a chemistry degree from the
Massaschusetts Institute of Technology, had discussions about using
carbon fiber particles to attack computer systems with Greg Daly, a
friend who is an electronics specialist overseeing Portland's 9-1-1
communications center.
"Daly stated that he and Bell had 'laughed' about attacking the 9-1-1
center with fiber," the affidavit said.
Daly also told IRS agents that he had hypothetical discussions with
Bell about contaminating water supplies and about making botulism
toxin from green beans, the affidavit said.
In the April 17 and 18 interviews with IRS agents, Daly said that as part
of his job, he "has keys and direct access to the Portland Bull Run
water treatment facility."
Daly said Monday that the conversations that he and Bell had were
merely "intellectual fun-and-games discussions" between old friends
who enjoy technical things.
"There's a difference between reasonable freedom of speech and
unreasonable probability of attack," Daly said. "Standing around and
flapping our lips about how it would be funny is way different from
even contemplating actual attack."
Daly described his friend of 15 years as a "bit of an odd unit" but never
dangerous and never serious about attacking the 9-1-1 systems or the
Bull Run watershed.
"I'd rat him out in a heartbeat for that," Daly said.
Thursday, IRS agents searched the home of Robert East, a merchant
radioman and a friend of Bell's. Among items seized was 3-foot length
of carbon fiber.
The affidavit said East told agents that he and Bell had discussed "the
possibility of putting the fibers down the air vents of a federal building"
to kill its computers and about using the fiber against the IRS.
However, Bell has described himself as a "man of ideas, not action,"
and East said Bell was a "talker, not a doer."
[End]
Thanks to John Painter.
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