[ISN] Infiltration of files seen as extensive

From: William Knowles (wk@private)
Date: Fri Jan 23 2004 - 08:00:33 PST

  • Next message: William Knowles: "[ISN] Students' computers hacked"

    Forwarded by: Tim Keller <tk @ scalefree.net>, 
    esteban <esteban @ zapata.org> & Art McGee 
    <amcgee @ virtualidentity.org>
    
    http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/01/22/infiltration_of_files_seen_as_extensive/
    
    By Charlie Savage
    Globe Staff
    1/22/2004
    
    WASHINGTON -- Republican staff members of the US Senate Judiciary
    Commitee infiltrated opposition computer files for a year, monitoring
    secret strategy memos and periodically passing on copies to the media,
    Senate officials told The Globe.
    
     From the spring of 2002 until at least April 2003, members of the GOP
    committee staff exploited a computer glitch that allowed them to
    access restricted Democratic communications without a password.
    Trolling through hundreds of memos, they were able to read talking
    points and accounts of private meetings discussing which judicial
    nominees Democrats would fight -- and with what tactics.
    
    The office of Senate Sergeant-at-Arms William Pickle has already
    launched an investigation into how excerpts from 15 Democratic memos
    showed up in the pages of the conservative-leaning newspapers and were
    posted to a website last November.
    
    With the help of forensic computer experts from General Dynamics and
    the US Secret Service, his office has interviewed about 120 people to
    date and seized more than half a dozen computers -- including four
    Judiciary servers, one server from the office of Senate majority
    leader Bill Frist of Tennessee, and several desktop hard drives.
    
    But the scope of both the intrusions and the likely disclosures is now
    known to have been far more extensive than the November incident,
    staffers and others familiar with the investigation say.
    
    The revelation comes as the battle of judicial nominees is reaching a
    new level of intensity. Last week, President Bush used his recess
    power to appoint Judge Charles Pickering to the Fifth Circuit Court of
    Appeals, bypassing a Democratic filibuster that blocked a vote on his
    nomination for a year because of concerns over his civil rights
    record.
    
    Democrats now claim their private memos formed the basis for a
    February 2003 column by conservative pundit Robert Novak that revealed
    plans pushed by Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts,
    to filibuster certain judicial nominees. Novak is also at the center
    of an investigation into who leaked the identity of a CIA agent whose
    husband contradicted a Bush administration claim about Iraqi nuclear
    programs.
    
    Citing "internal Senate sources," Novak's column described closed-door
    Democratic meetings about how to handle nominees.
    
    Its details and direct quotes from Democrats -- characterizing former
    nominee Miguel Estrada as a "stealth right-wing zealot" and describing
    the GOP agenda as an "assembly line" for right-wing nominees -- are
    contained in talking points and meeting accounts from the Democratic
    files now known to have been compromised.
    
    Novak declined to confirm or deny whether his column was based on
    these files.
    
    "They're welcome to think anything they want," he said. "As has been
    demonstrated, I don't reveal my sources."
    
    As the extent to which Democratic communications were monitored came
    into sharper focus, Republicans yesterday offered a new defense. They
    said that in the summer of 2002, their computer technician informed
    his Democratic counterpart of the glitch, but Democrats did nothing to
    fix the problem.
    
    Other staffers, however, denied that the Democrats were told anything
    about it before November 2003.
    
    The emerging scope of the GOP surveillance of confidential Democratic
    files represents a major escalation in partisan warfare over judicial
    appointments. The bitter fight traces back to 1987, when Democrats
    torpedoed Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court. In the 1990s,
    Republicans blocked many of President Clinton's nominees. Since
    President Bush took office, those roles have been reversed.
    
    Against that backdrop, both sides have something to gain and lose from
    the investigation into the computer files. For Democrats, the scandal
    highlights GOP dirty tricks that could result in ethics complaints to
    the Senate and the Washington Bar -- or even criminal charges under
    computer intrusion laws.
    
    "They had an obligation to tell each of the people whose files they
    were intruding upon -- assuming it was an accident -- that that was
    going on so those people could protect themselves," said one Senate
    staffer. "To keep on getting these files is just beyond the pale."
    
    But for Republicans, the scandal also keeps attention on the memo
    contents, which demonstrate the influence of liberal interest groups
    in choosing which nominees Democratic senators would filibuster. Other
    revelations from the memos include Democrats' race-based
    characterization of Estrada as "especially dangerous, because . . . he
    is Latino," which they feared would make him difficult to block from a
    later promotion to the Supreme Court.
    
    And, at the request of the NAACP, the Democrats delayed any hearings
    for the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals until after it heard a landmark
    affirmative action case -- though a memo noted that staffers "are a
    little concerned about the propriety of scheduling hearings based on
    the resolution of a particular case."
    
    After the contents of those memos were made public in The Wall Street
    Journal editorial pages and The Washington Times, Judiciary Chairman
    Orrin Hatch, Republican of Utah, made a preliminary inquiry and
    described himself as "mortified that this improper, unethical and
    simply unacceptable breach of confidential files may have occurred on
    my watch."
    
    Hatch also confirmed that "at least one current member of the
    Judiciary Committee staff had improperly accessed at least some of the
    documents referenced in media reports." He did not name the staffer,
    who he said was being placed on leave and who sources said has since
    resigned, although he had apparently already announced plans to return
    to school later this year.
    
    Officials familiar with the investigation identified that person as a
    legislative staff assistant whose name was removed from a list of
    Judiciary Committee staff in the most recent update of a Capitol Hill
    directory. The staff member's home number has been disconnected and he
    could not be reached for comment.
    
    Hatch also said that a "former member of the Judiciary staff may have
    been involved." Many news reports have subsequently identified that
    person as Manuel Miranda, who formerly worked in the Judiciary
    Committee office and now is the chief judicial nominee adviser in the
    Senate majority leader's office. His computer hard drive name was
    stamped on an e-mail from the National Abortion and Reproductive
    Rights Action League that was posted along with the Democratic Senate
    staff communications.
    
    Reached at home, Miranda said he is on paternity leave; Frist's office
    said he is on leave "pending the results of the investigation" -- he
    denied that any of the handwritten comments on the memos were by his
    hand and said he did not distribute the memos to the media. He also
    argued that the only wrongdoing was on the part of the Democrats --
    both for the content of their memos, and for their negligence in
    placing them where they could be seen.
    
    "There appears to have been no hacking, no stealing, and no violation
    of any Senate rule," Miranda said. "Stealing assumes a property right
    and there is no property right to a government document. . . . These
    documents are not covered under the Senate disclosure rule because
    they are not official business and, to the extent they were disclosed,
    they were disclosed inadvertently by negligent [Democratic] staff."
    
    Whether the memos are ultimately deemed to be official business will
    be a central issue in any criminal case that could result.
    Unauthorized access of such material could be punishable by up to a
    year in prison -- or, at the least, sanction under a Senate
    non-disclosure rule.
    
    The computer glitch dates to 2001, when Democrats took control of the
    Senate after the defection from the GOP of Senator Jim Jeffords,
    Independent of Vermont.
    
    A technician hired by the new judiciary chairman, Patrick Leahy,
    Democrat of Vermont, apparently made a mistake that allowed anyone to
    access newly created accounts on a Judiciary Committee server shared
    by both parties -- even though the accounts were supposed to restrict
    access only to those with the right password.
    
    
    
    
    -
    ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org
    
    To unsubscribe email majordomo@private with 'unsubscribe isn'
    in the BODY of the mail.
    



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Jan 23 2004 - 11:03:01 PST