[ISN] Man kept child porn at county job, police say

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Jan 08 2004 - 05:53:03 PST

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    http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/sun/2004/jan/07/516135702.html
    
    By Jen Lawson 
    <lawson@private>
    LAS VEGAS SUN
    January 07, 2004 
    
    A former Clark County employee was arrested Monday on charges of 
    downloading more than 400 images of child pornography on his computer 
    at the county Public Works Department.
    
    The downloads apparently unleashed a virus that crippled the county's 
    Internet system in August.
    
    Carl Stanley Lobsien, 50, is facing 25 counts of possession of child 
    pornography. He was being held this morning in the Clark County 
    Detention Center on $75,000 bail.
    
    A county employee since 1978, Lobsien was fired from his job as an 
    engineering technician Sept. 9 after officials found the images on his 
    computer, Erik Pappa, county spokesman, said.
    
    "We were a little dismayed not only by his actions but by the amount 
    of images he was able to download," Pappa said.
    
    The images consisted of nude girls under the age of 16, and some 
    showed them in sex acts with adult men, according to the police report 
    obtained by the Sun.
    
    The downloaded pornography led to at least one of the 
    "denial-of-service" attacks on the county's computer system last 
    summer, when the network crashed on several occasions because of 
    viruses, the police report says.
    
    Clark County's website, www.accessclarkcounty.com may be the most 
    visited in the state of Nevada, according to county officials. The 
    website attracted nearly 9 million visitors last July.
    
    Last summer, at the time that police say Lobsien's downloading brought 
    with it a virus that crashed the county system, the county's computer 
    specialists were dealing with several different viruses and scrambling 
    to apply "patches," or cyber-vaccinations, to the system.
    
    Part of the problem, according to county employees then, was that the 
    Clark County system was tied in a network with other computer systems 
    for other local government agencies, including Metro's.
    
    In those incidents, staffs at the various agencies disconnected links 
    between the networks to isolate the problems. While Lobsien's imported 
    virus could have disrupted the county's system Aug. 27, an attack 
    apparently caused by another virus occurred Sept. 10, a day after the 
    county had fired him.
    
    That computer problem shut down outside access for residents and 
    others seeking county information for most of the day. Similar 
    problems a few weeks earlier is what prompted county staff to look 
    for, and ultimately isolate, the problem to Lobsien's computer.
    
    "The network was really slow so our technicians took a look at what 
    was happening," Pappa said. "We're pretty happy that the computer 
    technicians were able to locate the problem."
    
    After county officials found the porn, they notified Detective Michael 
    Castaneda of Metro's sexual assault unit and he began his 
    investigation.
    
    Castaneda seized Lobsien's work computer and obtained a warrant that 
    permitted an officer with the Nevada Department of Public Safety's 
    Nevada Cyber Crimes Task Force to conduct a forensic examination of 
    it.
    
    Police on Oct. 9 searched Lobsien's home near Rainbow Boulevard and 
    Cheyenne Avenue for any possible child pornography, the police report 
    says. However, no computer was found.
    
    "Lobsien stated he was told by a member of his labor union to remove 
    anything that might be connected to this investigation from his 
    residence," the report says.
    
    Representatives with the local chapter of the Service Employees 
    International union did not return several phone calls on Tuesday and 
    today seeking comment on Lobsien.
    
    A warrant was issued Dec. 3 for Lobsien's arrest. He was taken into 
    custody at his home about 9:40 p.m. Monday.
    
    Although more than 400 pornographic images were found, Sgt. Russ 
    Shoemaker of Metro's Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force said 
    he felt charging him with 25 counts was sufficient.
    
    Lobsien had no disciplinary actions taken against him in his 26 years 
    as a county employee, Pappa said. He had no criminal record in Nevada 
    prior to this arrest, the police report says.
    
    Pappa said apparently no one in the Public Works Department was aware 
    that Lobsien was downloading pornography in his county cubicle, which 
    like many in the Clark County Government Center is in a relatively 
    open area. Lobsien did land surveying but carried out his duties from 
    his work station rather than in the field. He didn't have any contact 
    with the public.
    
    "He was pretty adept at hiding what he was doing," Pappa said. "He was 
    able to get away with it for quite a while without any of his 
    co-workers knowing about it."
    
    Since the incident, the county has installed filtering software that 
    prevents easy access to potentially pornographic websites, he said.
    
    Those who are drawn to child pornography will risk their jobs, 
    personal safety or even their freedom to view it, Shoemaker said.
    
    "Basically this is a needs-driven activity," he said. "Its very 
    similar to a substance addiction. They can't not do it and when the 
    opportunity presents itself they will succumb to it."
    
    
    
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