[ISN] Antiques man guilty of Enigma charge

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Thu Sep 27 2001 - 02:15:33 PDT

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    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/england/newsid_1564000/1564878.stm
    
    Wednesday, 26 September, 2001
    
    An antiques dealer has admitted handling a stolen code-breaking Enigma
    machine, worth 100,000.
    
    Dennis Yates, 58, of No Man's Lane, Sandiacre, Derbyshire, was due to
    stand trial at Aylesbury Crown Court but changed his plea.
    
    A separate charge of blackmailing Christine Large, the director of
    Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, where the machine was kept, was
    ordered to lie on file.
    
    The case was adjourned for reports.
    
    After leaving court, Yates said he had no comment to make but that he
    would be issuing a statement at a later date.
    
    The machine, used by German intelligence during World War II to
    encrypt top-secret messages, went missing at an open day at Bletchley
    Park, Bucks, on 1 April last year.
    
    Following the machine's theft a number of ransom demands were sent to
    Bletchley Park Trust, which runs the centre.
    
    The device reappeared in October last year when it was sent to BBC
    Newsnight presenter Jeremy Paxman.
    
    But three vital wheels from the machine were missing.
    
    Police say they received a ransom note for 25,000 for the missing
    parts.
    
    U-boat attacks
    
    The Enigma team's work in deciphering codes - used by the Germans to
    direct operations including U-boat attacks on Allied convoys - proved
    vital to the outcome of the war.
    
    Bletchley Park, code-named Station X, employed teams of
    mathematicians, linguists and chess champions during the war.
    
    By the end of 1945, 10,000 people worked there.
    
    With the help of decoding machines, the army of experts were able to
    crack the German code Enigma, which Berlin believed to be unbreakable.
    
    The work carried out at the top-secret centre is believed to have
    shortened the war by several years and was kept secret until 1967.
    
    The stolen device, an Abwehr Enigma G312, is a rare four-rotor
    version, one of only three still known to be in existence.
    
    Bletchley Park director Christine Large said: "I think we have a
    result for all the people who want to see this machine back at
    Bletchley Park.
    
    "It's a great tribute to the excellent work done by the police and
    people involved this case. They've done a fantastic job."
    
    
    
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