From: Ocean Group Date: Fri Jan 3, 2003 10:18am Subject: PCR Pcr....? Isn't that what the KGB(or whatever the Russian dept was in charge of making US tech's earn their wages!) planted in the US crest given to the Yanks in one of their embassies back in the olden days....? I read about that...the Yanks brought it into the UN Council meeting and gave the Russian rep's heart attacks...! Ha ha.... You might find some info on the unit from the UN minutes! I think I remember seeing it on someone's tscm website....I can't remember where exactly...but I think it was Kevin Murray's site..... I guess the use for it was that it was totally dorment most of the time, ie night time etc when sweeps were carried out, or if the sweeps were random only activated when someone important arrived at the embassy for meetings etc....the SA wouldn't see anything if there was no signal at the time....right? Cheers Vance Deran Ocean Group, Technical Security Division, Ireland. Message: 4 Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 01:20:27 -0000 From: "jdobbs2001 " Subject: passive cavity resonator operation Is there any public information regarding PCR's? estimated range and companies known to manufacture them. Is a PCR a typical T3 device used by LE or your typical PD? Why would someone use such a device since its operation would be obvious on any spectrum analyser. 6724 From: Ocean Group Date: Fri Jan 3, 2003 10:20am Subject: ID card solution... ######################################## Before I start, excuse anyone who has been getting emails bounced back from my email address, things went down over Christmas and no one noticed, hopefully all is back online though and please resend your messages, Thanks. ######################################## Hi Matt, Yeah that is a real fast buck option but to be honest I'd be too worried of sticky fingers messing around with the laminate and going design happy with creative id's. Ideally if a high grade laminate could pass as a pvc therm printed card then people would be less likely to munipulate them(or at least try)...that would be a fairly reasonable solution. Maybe a system whereby the inks are printed onto an ultra thin soft laminate and then over coated in a harder pvc like film that would give it an appearance of a therm printed card. But not only that making the things durable and waterproof and thus avoiding making them by the dozen per employee....Come to think of it I wouldn't see why the top over coat of laminate couldn't be hot thermal applied(like a standard laminator) hence making a good card. But the heat may cause image bleed on the underlying soft film from the standard OEM deskjet inks.... Unfortunately I haven't come by any high grade laminate system like that. Does anyone have any ideas regarding this? Of course I could just walk into Compustore and pick up a pack of HP laminate to run on a HP deskjet and off I go, but I see that coming back to haunt me in the future! But your right, $1400 is a waste of cash for an id system, fine for a large org but not for an SME. Hmmm, not easy, anyway maybe someone will have an idea. All the best Kind regards Vance Deran, Ocean Group, Technical Security Division, Ireland. Quoted: Message: 3 Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 22:04:38 -0800 From: "Matt Paulsen" Subject: RE: ID cards... If cost is a concern, why not just laminate a printout from a bubblejet/inkjet and a cheap webcam? Total cost is under $125 for everything easily and if you scrounge used you can get it all less than $50. Or if that's not great... around $1400 with a cam... but why waste the cash I ask.. you can get this http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=466060/search=FARGO% 2520printer/ut=0ce01c8e4f1f7082 http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=21255/search=card%25 20printer/ut=0ce01c8e4f1f7082 6725 From: cybersnoops1 Date: Fri Jan 3, 2003 1:37pm Subject: Wanted: Real-time GPS tracker... Seeking information on "real-time" GPS vehicle tracking devices. Any with knowledge of the best available to please contact via private email to: jhall@t... Thanks! John Hall President ASG Investigations jhall@t... 888.n2fraud 6726 From: Matt Paulsen Date: Sat Jan 4, 2003 11:31pm Subject: RE: ID card solution... Source it - http://www.123barcode.com/cards.htm -----Original Message----- From: Ocean Group [mailto:inertia@o...] Sent: Friday, January 03, 2003 8:21 AM To: TSCM Group Subject: [TSCM-L] ID card solution... ######################################## Before I start, excuse anyone who has been getting emails bounced back from my email address, things went down over Christmas and no one noticed, hopefully all is back online though and please resend your messages, Thanks. ######################################## Hi Matt, Yeah that is a real fast buck option but to be honest I'd be too worried of sticky fingers messing around with the laminate and going design happy with creative id's. Ideally if a high grade laminate could pass as a pvc therm printed card then people would be less likely to munipulate them(or at least try)...that would be a fairly reasonable solution. Maybe a system whereby the inks are printed onto an ultra thin soft laminate and then over coated in a harder pvc like film that would give it an appearance of a therm printed card. But not only that making the things durable and waterproof and thus avoiding making them by the dozen per employee....Come to think of it I wouldn't see why the top over coat of laminate couldn't be hot thermal applied(like a standard laminator) hence making a good card. But the heat may cause image bleed on the underlying soft film from the standard OEM deskjet inks.... Unfortunately I haven't come by any high grade laminate system like that. Does anyone have any ideas regarding this? Of course I could just walk into Compustore and pick up a pack of HP laminate to run on a HP deskjet and off I go, but I see that coming back to haunt me in the future! But your right, $1400 is a waste of cash for an id system, fine for a large org but not for an SME. Hmmm, not easy, anyway maybe someone will have an idea. All the best Kind regards Vance Deran, Ocean Group, Technical Security Division, Ireland. Quoted: Message: 3 Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 22:04:38 -0800 From: "Matt Paulsen" Subject: RE: ID cards... If cost is a concern, why not just laminate a printout from a bubblejet/inkjet and a cheap webcam? Total cost is under $125 for everything easily and if you scrounge used you can get it all less than $50. Or if that's not great... around $1400 with a cam... but why waste the cash I ask.. you can get this http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=466060/search=FARGO% 2520printer/ut=0ce01c8e4f1f7082 http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=21255/search=card%25 20printer/ut=0ce01c8e4f1f7082 ======================================================== TSCM-L Technical Security Mailing List "In a multitude of counselors there is strength" To subscribe to the TSCM-L mailing list visit: http://www.yahoogroups.com/community/TSCM-L It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of Star Bucks that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shaking, the shaking is a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. =================================================== TSKS Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 6727 From: Paolo Sfriso Date: Sun Jan 5, 2003 5:42am Subject: International Transport of TSCM Equipment Dear Colleagues. As most of you may know, an essential document for all involved in International TSCM services is an "ATA Carnet". More information on this document, how and where to obtain it, etc. can be found at the following website: http://www.iccwbo.org/index_ata.asp . Best wishes for a safe and prosperous 2003. Your Italian Contact. Paul Sfriso Director GRUPPO S.I.T. Security, Investigations & Technology Quarto d'Altino, Venice ITALY phone +39 0422 828517 fax +39 0422 823224 24hr GSM cellphone +39 335 5257308 www.grupposit.com paulsfriso@t... [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6728 From: Date: Sun Jan 5, 2003 8:05am Subject: File - Gold List The current version of this list may be found at: http://www.tscm.com/goldlist.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Recommended U.S. TSCM Firms The following is a list of private TSCM firms who specialize in "bug sweeps" and wiretap detection and all of whom have legitimate TSCM training, credentials, and equipment (all are very well respected within the industry). While most TSCM specialists are available for travel outside of a specific geographic area they tend to avoid such engagements, or will limited the services to vulnerability analysis, pre-construction assistance, non-instrumented inspections, simple RF checks, in-place monitoring, or limited TSCM services involving only a briefcase sized in-place monitoring system (such as a single spectrum analyzer, MSS, Eagle, ScanLock, OSCOR, SPECTRE, ROSE, or similar system). These private TSCM firms tend to operate in a specific geographic area limited to a few hundred miles (usually within a four to six hour automobile drive). However, all of the TSCM firms listed here are available for travel anywhere in the United States or the World on short notice, but only provide limited services when operating outside of their normal coverage area. This limited coverage area is due to the logistics involved in transporting hundreds and often thousands of pounds of sophisticated, highly sensitive electronic instruments, equipment and tools. Bug sweeps and wiretap detection involves the use of ladders, pole climbing equipment, LAN analyzers, X-ray systems, large antennas and other equipment which is not easily transported by airplane. TSCM firms also tend to restrict their operations to a specific geographic area to facilitate an expert level of knowledge regarding the RF environment, construction methods used, community zoning, population demographics, civil engineering, aeronautic or maritime facilities, local military bases, and related areas. Knowledge of such regional information is critical for a successful TSCM project. The TSCM specialist must also have an intimate knowledge of the telephone systems, engineering methods, fiber optics, major cable locations, central office switches, test numbers, and related communications infrastructure present or being used in an area (which tends to be very regional). An understanding of what types of eavesdropping devices, methods, and frequencies are being used in an area is also important, as is a knowledge of what type of surveillance equipment is being sold within that region (and other areas). The TSCM Procedural and Protocols Guides used by a specialist also tend to be based on specific issues and variables present in that specific geographic area. On a more interesting note, many of these firms are located in, or near major maritime port cities. The heaviest concentrations are around major cities on the East and West coasts with a very limited presence in the Mid-West, Great Plains, and Rockies. If you are in the Mid-West, Great Plains, or Rockies area you would need to engage a TSCM firm from one of the major port cities. For example customers in Chicago, St. Louis, Memphis, Denver, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis, Billings, etc. would need to fly a TSCM specialist in from Boston, New York, Washington DC, Los Angles, Lexington, or Seattle. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Please be patient when contacting these firms, as if they are out serving a client they may not be able to return your call for several hours. Rates generally are non-negotiable and reflect the cost of the sweep practitioner's time, investment in equipment acquisition and maintenance, several weeks of in-service training a year, travel, administrative and communications time and expense to coordinate the sweep and written report, and a fair profit for their services. It is very unwise to shop for sweeps by using price as a criteria as it only invites getting ripped off. Legitimate TSCM professionals are not interested in, nor will then engage in negotiating for a lower price. When you contact persons on this list, you are talking with someone in the same league as an attorney or surgeon, not a salesman. In fact most of the people listed on this page have more time in their specialized training than do most attorneys or medical professionals. Anything beyond an initial phone call usually will be billable time. Attorneys and doctors don't consult for free, and neither do legitimate TSCM specialists. If a potential client calls with a long list of questions not pertaining directly to hiring the practitioner, or wants to know how to do his own sweep, or wants to know how to use the sweep kit he purchased on his own, expect to pay an hourly rate in advance for consulting services. If you are considering engaging (or have already engaged) a TSCM firm and they are not listed in the following directory you would do well to immediately ask some awkward questions. It is also important you understand that legitimate services by a competent TSCM firm rarely start at less then several thousand dollars for even a basic sweep. Keep in mind that there only a small number of legitimate and competent TSCM counterintelligence specialists or "Bug Sweepers" in the U.S. private sector. Legitimate TSCM firms are in very high demand, hard to find, and expensive; so be patient when trying to find one to help you. Also, the firms listed on this page are not attorneys and cannot tell you whether it is legal or illegal for you to monitor your own phones. Always call a competent licensed attorney for legal advice. Without exception, no one listed here performs eavesdropping services or sells surveillance equipment to any other than government agencies AND WILL NOT REFER YOU TO ANYONE WHO DOES. When you contact any of the following firms please mention that you saw them listed on this web site. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ All of New England, Upstate New York, and the Boston Metropolitan Area (MA, RI, CT, VT, NH, ME, New York State including Long Island, and some of New Jersey) Available on a limited basis to cover any location within 1000 miles of Boston. James M. Atkinson Granite Island Group 127 Eastern Avenue #291 Gloucester, MA 01931-8008 (978) 546-3803 Telephone URL: http://www.tscm.com/ E-mail: jmatk@t... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Stamford, Connecticut Metropolitan Area (also, Manhattan, Long Island, and New Jersey) Sam Daskam Information Security Associates, Inc. 38 Settlers Trail Stamford, CT 06903 (203) 329-8387 Telephone URL: http://www.isa-tscm.com/ E-mail:sales@i... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Norwalk, and Lower Fairfield Country Area (also, Manhattan, Long Island, Philadelphia, and New Jersey) Rob Muessel TSCM Technical Services 11 Bayberry Lane Norwalk, CT 06851 (203) 354-9040 Telephone URL: http://www.tscmtech.com/ E-mail:rmuessel@t... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Greater Philadelphia and Harrisburg Metropolitan Area (also, serving South-Eastern and Central Pennsylvania) Bob Motzer RCM and Associates 609 Sandra Lane Phoenixville, PA 19460 (888) 990-6265 Telephone E-mail: 1RCM@M... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Washington DC and Baltimore Metropolitan Area (also, Virginia, Delaware, and Pennsylvania) Steve Uhrig SWS Security 1300 Boyd Road Street, MD 21154-1836 (410) 879-4035 Telephone URL: http://www.swssec.com/ E-mail: steve@s... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Houston, Dallas, Austin, and Galveston (also, Gulf Coast of Texas and Louisiana) Rick Udovich Communication Security, Inc. 2 Shadow Lane Bay City, TX 77414 (979) 244-4920 Telephone URL: http://www.bugsweep.com/ E-mail: rjudo@s... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Atlanta Metropolitan Area, Southeastern US (also, AL, FL, GA, NC, SC, TN) Buzz Benson Executive World Services, Inc. P.O. Box 33 Braselton, Georgia 30517-0033 (678) 316-7002 Telephone URL: http://www.executiveworldservices.com/ E-mail: sales@e... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Lexington KY Metropolitan Area (also, Louisville, Cincinnati, and Central Midwest) Bill G. Rhoads Intelcom, Inc. 121 Prosperous Place, Suite 4B Lexington, KY 40509 (859) 263-9425 Telephone E-mail: bgr101@a... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Michigan and Surrounding Area (also, Indiana, Ohio, and Northern Midwest Region) Chad Margita Off Duty Security 18301 Eight Mile Rd, Suite 214 Eastpointe, MI 48021 (586) 774-1675 Telephone E-mail: offdutysecurity@c... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Washington State and Seattle WA Metropolitan Area (also, Oregon, and the Pacific North West) Gordon Mitchell Future Focus, Inc. P.O. Box 2547 Woodinville, WA 98072 (888) BUG-KILR Telephone URL: http://www.bug-killer.com/ E-mail: enquiries@b... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ San Francisco and all of Northern California (also, Silicon Valley Area) William Bennett Walsingham Associates, Inc. P.O. Box 4264 San Rafael, CA 94913 (415) 492-1594 Telephone E-mail: walsingham@c... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Los Angeles Metropolitan Area, Beverly Hills, Orange County, Los Angles County, San Diego County (also, Riverside County, and Ventura County) Rick Hofmann Microsearch LLC P.O. Box 2084 Cypress, CA 90630 (714) 952-3812 Telephone URL: http://home.earthlink.net/~microsearch E-mail: tscmsweeps@e... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Los Angeles Metropolitan Area, Beverly Hills, Orange County, Los Angles County, San Diego County, San Francisco, Silicon Valley, San Jose, San Diego, and Las Vegas. (Also, anywhere in a thousand mile radius from Los Angeles.) Roger Tolces Electronic Security 6646 Hollywood Blvd. #212 Los Angeles, CA 90028 (323) 462-1351 Telephone URL: http://www.bugsweeps.com/ E-mail: info@b... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 6729 From: Date: Sun Jan 5, 2003 8:05am Subject: File - mission.txt TSCM-L Technical Security Mailing List Dedicated to TSCM specialists engaging in expert technical and analytical research for the detection, nullification, and isolation of eavesdropping devices, wiretaps, bugging devices, technical surveillance penetrations, technical surveillance hazards, and physical security weaknesses. This also includes bug detection, bug sweep, and wiretap detection services. Special emphasis is given to detecting and countering espionage and other threats and activities directed by foreign intelligence services against the United States Government, United States corporations, establishments, and citizens. The list includes technical discussion regarding the design and construction of SCIF facilities, Black Chambers, and Screen Rooms. This list is also for discussing DIAM 50-3, NSA-65, and DCID 1/21, 1/22 compliance. The primary goal and mission of this list is to "raise the bar" and increase the level of professionalism present within the TSCM business. The secondary goal of this list is to increase the quality and effectiveness of our efforts so that we give spies and eavesdroppers no quarter, and to neutralize all of their espionage efforts. This mailing list is moderated by James M. Atkinson and sponsored by Granite Island Group as a public service to the TSCM, Counter Intelligence, and technical security community. 6730 From: Date: Mon Jan 6, 2003 1:51pm Subject: Spies keep busy as ever, quietly from the January 02, 2003 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0102/p06s01-woeu.html Spies keep busy as ever, quietly On Friday, Russia banned US Peace Corps volunteers, accusing them of espionage. By Fred Weir | Special to The Christian Science Monitor MOSCOW - Following Russia's historic rapprochement with the West after Sept. 11, even celluloid superspy James Bond has forgiven his traditional nemesis in Moscow and gone in search of fresh enemies. The latest Bond flick, "Die Another Day," has the evergreen hero battling bad guys from the hermit state of North Korea. That's fiction, but in the real world, actual spies appear to be busier than ever. In the past month alone, Canada and Sweden angrily expelled Russian diplomats for "activities incompatible with their status," the familiar code for espionage. Moscow announced Friday that it will no longer accept US Peace Corps workers, after denying visas to 30 of 64 volunteers, charging they were up to more than humanitarian work. "The leading intelligence agencies of the world have strengthened their presence in Russia," complained Oleg Firomolotov, deputy chief of counterintelligence for the FSB security service, in a recent interview with the government paper Rossiskaya Gazeta. "Russia is a priority object of their activity." From the other side, the authoritative Jane's Intelligence Digest warns that "Russian intelligence operations in the West appear to be rapidly escalating." In London alone, the number of operatives of Moscow's SVR external spy service has jumped from just one in 1991 to 33 today, the journal estimates. Russian President Vladimir Putin responded to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks by moving Russia into solid geopolitical alignment with the West. In the past year, Russian and US special services have cooperated closely in the war against terrorism, and Moscow has even forged a historic friendship pact with the Western military alliance NATO. Experts say Mr. Putin's gestures were genuine, and that the Kremlin sees cooperation with the West as crucial, to overcome Russia's post-Soviet economic malaise and national identity crisis. "In the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, Russia provided more help to the United States than all the countries of NATO combined," says Vyacheslav Nikonov, head of the independent Politika Foundation, and a former political adviser to the Soviet KGB security service. "We have a common enemy now, and such contacts are very much in the interests of both sides." In the short term, however, Russia's political shift has not brought the hoped-for wave of foreign investment to revive its sluggish economy, particularly the crumbling military-industrial complex. One traditional solution, with which former KGB foreign agent Putin is personally familiar, is to ferret out Western technological and managerial secrets by means of espionage. "Intelligence services will always exist," says former KGB operative Stanislav Lekarev. "It's a mistake to associate espionage with war. In fact, the less shooting is going on, the more spying there will be. Russia's secret services were much depleted in the post-Soviet era, so they're only now beginning to get back up to speed." Two Russian diplomats expelled from Canada recently were reportedly agents of the GRU armed forces intelligence wing, seeking access to high-tech military secrets. Two Russians kicked out of Sweden in November were allegedly trying to penetrate Telefon AB LM Ericson, a company that makes cellphones and aircraft radar systems. Both cases resulted in old-fashioned tit-for-tat expulsions of Canadian and Swedish diplomats from Moscow. The thirty American Peace Corps workers barred from Russia last month stand accused of "collecting information on the social, political, and economic situation in Russian regions, [on] staff members of bodies of power, [and] on elections," according to FSB director Nikolai Patrushev. Russian security officials are understandably tight-lipped about their espionage abroad, but often publicly express pride in their Soviet heritage, which includes running a formidable spy network in the West. In a recent Rossiskaya Gazeta interview, the head of Russia's SVR external intelligence agency, Sergei Lebedev, suggested that tradition may not have died with the USSR. "Even now, many of our supporters help us out of political conviction," he said. "There are people abroad who sympathize with Russia and support our efforts to build a multipolar world, to ensure a global balance of forces." Experts say the international spy game now seldom leads to splashy public scandals the way it did in cold war days. Today, leaders dance a careful two-step around their countries' shadow activities. "We've learned to spy and smile at the same time," says Mikhail Lyubimov, a famous Soviet agent who, since his retirement, has become one of Russia's best-loved writers of espionage novels. "Our presidents go on kissing each other, and have become very adept at pretending nothing is happening." Mr. Lebedev, the SVR chief, also hinted that what the public sees of today's cloak-and-dagger world is just the tip of the iceberg. "I can tell you there are plenty of cases in which a spy is unmasked, and he is allowed by mutual agreement to leave the country quietly," he said. "Neither the press nor anyone else ever gets to hear about it." But the continuing focus of Russian security services on catching spies, and the broad definitions of the term they seem to apply, has some experts and human rights advocates worried. "All reforms are coming to an end and we are returning to the past," says Konstantin Preobrazhensky, a former KGB colonel turned critic. "The same bitter and vengeful people are in charge, and they feel their chance to return has arrived." "We see a lot of dubious accusations against journalists, environmentalists, human rights workers and scientists," says Otto Latsis, with the liberal daily Novoye Izvestiya. "This has nothing to do with ensuring national security, and a lot to do with intimidating people who commit themselves to political causes that are inconvenient for the state, or who associate too much with foreigners." In October, the FSB raided the offices of Baikal Ecological Wave, a coalition dedicated to saving Siberia's fragile Lake Baikal, seizing maps, volunteer lists, and computers. Then, this month, the commander of Russia's north Caucasus military zone, Viktor Kazantsev, accused humanitarian agencies of supplying food to Chechen rebels. "All this aid activity should be taken under tough control," he said. "We all know perfectly well who works in the Red Cross: spies." Some argue Russia's security services are using harsh domestic tactics in a misguided effort to prove their relevance to a population weary of old enemy stereotypes. "Our secret agents are the last children of the cold war," says Yury Shchekochikhin, deputy chairman of the State Duma's security commission. "Of course the state must protect its secrets. But it's time for our special services to grow up and stop trying to divide the world into black and white, them and us. That time is gone forever." [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6731 From: Louisiana Investigator Date: Tue Jan 7, 2003 9:53am Subject: RE: Wanted: Real-time GPS tracker... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Check out the items at http://store.yahoo.com/national-scientific/ The NSC Followit looks interesting. Louisiana has a very poor GSM network, but most other areas in the US have good GSM coverage. If so, I think that this device would be excellent for asset or vehicle tracking. If you do purchase one of these items, please reply with a brief evaluation. Hope this helps, Ricky Gray Richard T. Gray Jr., Licensed Private Investigator Gray & Associates, L.L.C. A Professional Investigative Firm 408 North Parkerson Crowley, LA 70527 337-785-0046 Voice 337-785-2768 Fax Serving All of Louisiana WWW.LA-PI.COM - -----Original Message----- From: cybersnoops1 [mailto:info@n...] Sent: Friday, January 03, 2003 1:38 PM To: TSCM-L@yahoogroups.com Subject: [TSCM-L] Wanted: Real-time GPS tracker... Seeking information on "real-time" GPS vehicle tracking devices. Any with knowledge of the best available to please contact via private email to: jhall@t... Thanks! John Hall President ASG Investigations jhall@t... 888.n2fraud Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ADVERTISEMENT ======================================================== TSCM-L Technical Security Mailing List "In a multitude of counselors there is strength" To subscribe to the TSCM-L mailing list visit: http://www.yahoogroups.com/community/TSCM-L It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of Star Bucks that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shaking, the shaking is a warning. It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. =================================================== TSKS Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 7.0.3 for non-commercial use iQA/AwUBPhr35WUZ0inzIURkEQJ/dACgsViDjVQNrwtZmsMYyH/76Zsj6pMAoLzu HXXAttyrXYaPkJgXWT4ZSLVD =hD8e -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- 6732 From: Ocean Group Date: Tue Jan 7, 2003 11:22am Subject: High Tech Wire Strippers Hi, This may seem like a strange question, but a colleague informed me today he has seen a laser wire stripper. He says its just like a laser pointer but more powerful and can used to melt away the plastic in a precise area of typical small electronic wire.... He is however, unable to give me a supplier or any other details so I am a little skeptical as to its existance... Can anyone shed some light on this? Kind regards Vance Deran Ocean Group, Technical Security Division, Ireland. 6733 From: Date: Tue Jan 7, 2003 10:44am Subject: Cryptome Log Subpoenaed Cryptome Log Subpoenaed http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/03/01/07/0550242.shtml?tid=99 Posted by chrisd on Tuesday, January 07, @10:14AM from the john-has-my-tie dept. PaulBu writes "Stopped by on Cryptome tonight... It seems that their logs have been subpoenaed by Massachusetts Assistant Attorney General Chief, Corruption, Fruad (sic) & Computer Crime Division. Cryptome's answer was that "logs of Cryptome are deleted daily, or more often during heavy traffic, to protect the privacy of visitors to the site." (Good job!) See here: http://cryptome.org/cryptome-log.htm [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6734 From: Louisiana Investigator Date: Tue Jan 7, 2003 10:30pm Subject: Periscope for Surveillance Van -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Does any list members have any surveillance van equipment for sale? I am particularly interested in a motorized periscope. Thanks in advance, Richard Gray Richard T. Gray Jr., Licensed Private Investigator Gray & Associates, L.L.C. A Professional Investigative Firm 408 North Parkerson Crowley, LA 70527 337-785-0046 Voice 337-785-2768 Fax Serving All of Louisiana WWW.LA-PI.COM -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 7.0.3 for non-commercial use iQA/AwUBPhupZmUZ0inzIURkEQLZlgCbBjD2gnfATqsG3o11KD5WPwbZEewAoL9k OLVGWj+NqxqjRZ1fJQcKgflM =tfCJ -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- 6735 From: James M. Atkinson Date: Wed Jan 8, 2003 6:06pm Subject: Dear Abby Dear Abby My husband is a lying cheat. He tells me he loves me, but he has cheated our entire marriage. He is a good provider and has many friends and supporters. They know he is a lying cheat, but they just ignore the issue. He is a hard worker but many of his coworkers are leery of him. Every time he gets caught, he denies it all. Then he admits that he was wrong and begs me to forgive him. This has been going on for so long, everyone in town knows he is a lying cheat. To top it off, he ignores me just because I am a lesbian. Abby, I just don't know what to do. Signed, Frustrated in New York ----- Frustrated in New York: You should dump him. Now that you are finally a New York Senator, you don't need him anymore. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The First, The Largest, The Most Popular, and The Most Complete TSCM, Bug Sweep, Spy Hunting, and Counterintelligence Site on the Internet. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- James M. Atkinson Ph: (978) 546-3803 Granite Island GroupFax: (978) 546-9467 127 Eastern Avenue #291http://www.tscm.com/ Gloucester, MA 01931-8008mailto:jmatk@t... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vocatus atque non vocatus deus aderit -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6736 From: Steve Uhrig Date: Wed Jan 8, 2003 8:10pm Subject: Executive World Services? If anyone is on here from Executive World Services, be advised sales@executiveworldservices just sent me a virus which was detected and quarantined. The message had a subject something like 'Frame Spacing'. Anyone having BOTH of these two addresses: sales@executiveworldservices *and* Steve@s... in their address book is a suspect for being infected. The infection may well not be on the executiveworldservices end. We've seen this before, and the culprit was an innocent third party who had both our addresses in his address book. Took a lot of investigation on the part of a savvy list member to isolate a third party problem. Someone needs to take appropriate action. If YOU have both addresses in your address book, it may be YOU. Steve ******************************************************************* Steve Uhrig, SWS Security, Maryland (USA) Mfrs of electronic surveillance equip mailto:Steve@s... website http://www.swssec.com tel +1+410-879-4035, fax +1+410-836-1190 "In God we trust, all others we monitor" ******************************************************************* 6737 From: Marcel Date: Thu Jan 9, 2003 11:57am Subject: LJK-Junior Low Cost Vehicle Tracking Product ( BW)(NV-INTERTRAK-3)(NMRX) InterTrak, Televoke & Numerex Introduce LJK-Junior Low Cost Vehicle Tracking Product;``Security is More Important Than Ever Before'' Business Editors/High-Tech Writers 2003 International CES LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 9, 2003--InterTrak Tracking Services, L.L.C. (www.trackmenow.com), responding to dealer requests for a simplified version of their successful LJK-EXT GPS vehicle tracking product is proud to announce that it will be showing its new LJK-Junior model at the 2003 Consumer Electronics Show. The show takes place in Las Vegas, from January 9-12, 2003, Booth 4856. The LJK-Junior includes two inputs, three outputs and independently mounted combination Cellular/GPS hi-gain antennas. "The LJK-Junior culminates our dealer field experience and includes the most popular product features, yet the LJK-Junior is simple to install coupled with a lower MSRP," says Barnet Fagel, InterTrak's Vice President of Sales and Marketing. Fagel added "We have been in the market for the last two years collecting real world market information that has been used to define the new LJK-Junior to appeal to mass market buyers." About InterTrak InterTrak L.L.C. has offices in Frisco, Texas and Chicago whose employees have accumulated 20 years of vehicle security and tracking experience. InterTrak now markets the most cost efficient vehicle location products and service in North America. Coupling the combined industry talents of its corporate staff InterTrak is well positioned to take advantage of the burgeoning Telematics market. Combining the communications power of the Internet, Cellular Communications, and the Global Positioning System (GPS), InterTrak promises to be the bright star on the automotive location horizon. For additional information on InterTrak's products and services call1-866-FINDME1 (346-3631) or visit us www.trackmenow.com. About Televoke Televoke "connects people to things" by providing an automated web and telephony service platform that enables individuals and enterprises to track and control valuable assets (e.g., people or vehicle). For the first time ever, businesses and their customers can be proactively notified via phone, pager or email when a valuable fixed or mobile asset is at risk. The Televoke service platform can be customized and branded for any partner, and integrated with virtually any enterprise system, hardware device, GPS or other location technology, wireless or wire line network. For more information on Televoke, visit www.televoke.com or send an email to info@t.... About Numerex Numerex (Nasdaq:NMRX) is a technology company comprised of operating subsidiaries that develop and market a wide range of communications products and services. The Company's primary focus is wireless data communications utilizing proprietary network technologies. The Company primarily offers products and services in wireless data communications through Cellemetry(R) and Data1Source(TM), and digital multimedia through PowerPlay(TM). These services enable customers around the globe to monitor and move information for a variety of applications from home and business security to distance learning. In addition, the Company offers wire line alarm security products and services, as well as telecommunications network operational support systems. For more information on Numerex, please visit our Web site at: http://www.nmrx.com. --30--lr/da* CONTACT: InterTrak L.L.C., Frisco Barnet Fagel, 1-866-FINDME1 (346-3631) Ext. 111 barnet@t... KEYWORD: TEXAS NEVADA TRACK INDUSTRY KEYWORD: SOFTWARE COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS AUTOMOTIVE TELECOMMUNICATIONS PRODUCT TRADESHOW SOURCE: InterTrak Tracking Services, L.L.C. http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/f_headline.cgi?day0/230090318&ticker=nmrx 6738 From: Ocean Group Date: Wed Jan 8, 2003 3:46pm Subject: News - CCTV Security cameras are getting smart -- and scary From wealthy private homes to military installations, security cameras are going high tech. Prompted in part by new fears after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, camera makers, security specialists, hard-disk makers and chip designers are transforming the art of video surveillance, long known for its grainy, black-and-white images and reams of tape. http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/4883623.htm 6739 From: Jacob Date: Wed Jan 8, 2003 9:04pm Subject: Re: ID cards... Vance, The two big players in the card printer business are ELTRON and FARGO. They both have web sites and there are many distrubuters in the US. The also sell "overlaminates" that can contain gold ink patterns or hollograms. There can print on regular pvc or even ProxCards or MagStripe cards. Here are a few links to get you going. http://www.e-scan.com/plastic.htm http://store.yahoo.com/cardprinterwarehouse/ http://www.plastic-id-card-printers.com/ Jake Ryan This message was scanned with Norton AntiVirus 2002. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6740 From: Buzz Benson Date: Thu Jan 9, 2003 2:41pm Subject: Re: Executive World Services? After reading Steve's msg I immediately ran a full Norton scan revealing no infections. Steve's infectious msg was received from the address "sales@executiveworldservices" which is not a valid sender address. It is only a a mailbox for incomming mail. I called Steve and after some discussion it was determined that the suspect virus probably uses SMTP to propagate and randomly selects email addresses from resident data bases in the host. An example would be a varient of the WORM KLEZ. So, as Steve said earlier, check your addresses for "sales@executiveworldservices" and "steve@swssec". If you have both you may be the host. Scan with Norton Anti-virus. Thanks for the heads-up Steve. Buzz Benson EWS Atlanta USA www.executiveworldservices.com email: buzzben@m... Tel: (678) 316 7002 Fax: (706) 654 2080 >From: "Steve Uhrig" >Reply-To: Steve@s... >To: tscm-l@yahoogroups.com >Subject: [TSCM-L] Executive World Services? >Date: Wed, 08 Jan 2003 21:10:54 -0500 > >If anyone is on here from Executive World Services, be advised >sales@executiveworldservices just sent me a virus which was detected >and quarantined. > >The message had a subject something like 'Frame Spacing'. > >Anyone having BOTH of these two addresses: > >sales@executiveworldservices > >*and* > >Steve@s... > >in their address book is a suspect for being infected. The infection >may well not be on the executiveworldservices end. We've seen this >before, and the culprit was an innocent third party who had both our >addresses in his address book. Took a lot of investigation on the >part of a savvy list member to isolate a third party problem. > >Someone needs to take appropriate action. If YOU have both addresses >in your address book, it may be YOU. > >Steve > > >******************************************************************* >Steve Uhrig, SWS Security, Maryland (USA) >Mfrs of electronic surveillance equip >mailto:Steve@s... website http://www.swssec.com >tel +1+410-879-4035, fax +1+410-836-1190 >"In God we trust, all others we monitor" >******************************************************************* > > > >======================================================== > TSCM-L Technical Security Mailing List > "In a multitude of counselors there is strength" > > To subscribe to the TSCM-L mailing list visit: >http://www.yahoogroups.com/community/TSCM-L > > It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. > It is by the juice of Star Bucks that thoughts acquire speed, > the hands acquire shaking, the shaking is a warning. > It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. >=================================================== TSKS > >Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ _________________________________________________________________ The new MSN 8 is here: Try it free* for 2 months http://join.msn.com/?page=dept/dialup 6741 From: James M. Atkinson Date: Thu Jan 9, 2003 11:10pm Subject: SpyKing As many of you know my website concerns methods, techniques, and protocols used to find bugs and wire tapes, and the art and craft of hunting spies. Part of this involves covering court cases when spies and their associates are busted, and presenting historical public documents about how the business operated prior to the bust, during the bust, during the court case, and then watching how the people involved re-invent themselves (all culled from government documents). A good example is the following page where I cover the Frank Jones bust, which includes court documents on the case, incorporation documents, and so on. http://www.tscm.com/FNJspyking.html There is a very, very small amount of materials that is not based on court documents, but this small amount is based on interviews I have personally performed, or taken from published articles (with appropriate credit) and added my own added commentary. Please let me know if you find any errors or omissions, and please let me know if you think I need to clarify anything on this or any other page. -jma -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The First, The Largest, The Most Popular, and The Most Complete TSCM, Bug Sweep, Spy Hunting, and Counterintelligence Site on the Internet. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- James M. Atkinson Ph: (978) 546-3803 Granite Island GroupFax: (978) 546-9467 127 Eastern Avenue #291http://www.tscm.com/ Gloucester, MA 01931-8008mailto:jmatk@t... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vocatus atque non vocatus deus aderit -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6742 From: Steve Uhrig Date: Sat Jan 11, 2003 8:45pm Subject: Someone else has a virus Anyone having both the following addresses in their address book should check their machine for virii: walshingham@c... AND Steve@s... I received a spoofed message from the compuserve address. As with the other one earlier this week, some third party machine is infected, and is sending random messages to persons in your address book, spoofing the headers of someone else in your address book. The spoof apparently is coming from the AOL domain, specifically: LugNutz3@a... Headers below. ================ Status: U Return-Path: Received: from halfdome.istep.com ([66.250.97.227]) by merlin (EarthLink SMTP Server) with ESMTP id 18xxZk1bz3NZFlq0 for ; Sat, 11 Jan 2003 18:36:38 -0800 (PST) Received: from rly-ip06.mx.aol.com (rly-ip06.mx.aol.com [205.188.156.51]) by halfdome.istep.com (8.12.3/8.12.3/Debian -4) with ESMTP id h0C2a51l006898 for ; Sat, 11 Jan 2003 18:36:06 -0800 Received: from logs-tp.proxy.aol.com (logs-tp.proxy.aol.com [152.163.204.135]) by rly-ip06.mx.aol.com (v89.10) with ESMTP id RELAYIN5-0111213522; Sat, 11 Jan 2003 21:35:22 1900 Received: from Wuntnqpno (AC958C1C.ipt.aol.com [172.149.140.28]) by logs-tp.proxy.aol.com (8.12.6/8.12.6) with SMTP id h0C2X7qq183116 for ; Sat, 11 Jan 2003 21:33:08 -0500 (EST) Date: Sat, 11 Jan 2003 21:33:07 -0500 (EST) Message-Id: <200301120233.h0C2X7qq183116@l...> From: walsingham To: steve@s... Subject: {Virus?} Bottom footer table MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="Ds85WC93ulO0637jf59tV66820v9zJQb386Sa" X-Apparently-From: LugNutz3@a... X-MailScanner: Found to be infected X-MailScanner-SpamCheck: not spam, SpamAssassin (Message larger than max testing size) X-PMFLAGS: 570949760 0 1 P6AE60.CNM --Ds85WC93ulO0637jf59tV66820v9zJQb386Sa Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Warning: This message has had one or more attachments removed Warning: (msg-4856-5.html, href.scr). Warning: Please read the "VirusWarning.txt" attachment(s) for more informat= ion. --Ds85WC93ulO0637jf59tV66820v9zJQb386Sa Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; name="VirusWarning.txt" Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="VirusWarning.txt" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable This is a message from the I-Step E-Mail Virus Protection Service ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The original e-mail attachment "msg-4856-5.html" was believed to be infected by a virus and has been replaced by this warning message. If you wish to receive a copy of the *infected* attachment, please e-mail helpdesk and include the whole of this message in your request. Alternatively, you can call them, with the contents of this message to hand when you call. At Sat Jan 11 18:36:10 2003 the virus scanner said: Found dangerous IFrame tag in HTML message Note to Help Desk: Look on I-Step Mail System in /var/spool/MailScanner/qua= rantine/20030111 (message h0C2a51l006898). --=20 I-Step Communications Anti-Virus Team (415) 777-3268 mail-support@i... --Ds85WC93ulO0637jf59tV66820v9zJQb386Sa Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; name="VirusWarning.txt" Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="VirusWarning.txt" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable This is a message from the I-Step E-Mail Virus Protection Service ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The original e-mail attachment "href.scr" was believed to be infected by a virus and has been replaced by this warning message. If you wish to receive a copy of the *infected* attachment, please e-mail helpdesk and include the whole of this message in your request. Alternatively, you can call them, with the contents of this message to hand when you call. At Sat Jan 11 18:36:10 2003 the virus scanner said: href.scr Infection: W32/Klez.H@mm Windows Screensavers are often used to hide viruses (href.scr) Note to Help Desk: Look on I-Step Mail System in /var/spool/MailScanner/qua= rantine/20030111 (message h0C2a51l006898). --=20 I-Step Communications Anti-Virus Team (415) 777-3268 mail-support@i... --Ds85WC93ulO0637jf59tV66820v9zJQb386Sa Content-Type: application/octet-stream; name=fact_driver[1].htm Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-ID: ================== Steve ******************************************************************* Steve Uhrig, SWS Security, Maryland (USA) Mfrs of electronic surveillance equip mailto:Steve@s... website http://www.swssec.com tel +1+410-879-4035, fax +1+410-836-1190 "In God we trust, all others we monitor" ******************************************************************* 6743 From: A Grudko Date: Sat Jan 11, 2003 10:33pm Subject: Re: Someone else has a virus - Original Message - From: Steve Uhrig > Anyone having both the following addresses in their address book > should check their machine for virii: > walshingham@c... Thanks Caught on it's way in and zapped by my code-warriors. Andy Grudko (British), Grad I.S, South Africa SIRA investigators Reg. No. 8642 www.grudko.com , andy@g... . Est. 1981. International investigations (+27 12) 244 0255 - 244 0256 (Fax). IPA, SACI, WAD, CALI, UKPIN, IWWA. When you need it done right - first time 6744 From: A Grudko Date: Sun Jan 12, 2003 3:15am Subject: Yaesu FT90-R mods I have a Yaesu FT90-R (which is a great radio) which I use primarily for UHF comms on 407-409 Rx, 417- 419 Tx on a + 10 Meg repeater system. Secondary comms are simplex in the 407 - 409 range and this is a problem for me as Tx is blocked below 410.00 . Does anyone have a modification around this block. Private replies please. Andy Grudko (British), Grad I.S, South Africa SIRA investigators Reg. No. 8642 www.grudko.com , andy@g... . Est. 1981. International investigations (+27 12) 244 0255 - 244 0256 (Fax). IPA, SACI, WAD, CALI, UKPIN, IWWA. When you need it done right - first time 6745 From: frost_bitten_ca Date: Fri Jan 10, 2003 0:54pm Subject: What might someone do with stuff like this? Usable range apparantly to 60 feet, audible to 300 feet. HyperSonic Sound What is HSS? HyperSonic Sound Technology is simply the most revolutionary sound reproduction system of this century. Not since the development of the "cone" loudspeaker more than 75 years ago has any technology provided such significant departure from conventional loudspeakers and such a remarkable new approach to the reproduction of sound ... http://www.atcsd.com/tl_hss.html --- Put sound where you want it Is already successfully used by major corporations, museums, and other venues all over the world • Delivers clean, clear audio with ~1% distortion • Is fully CE compliant • Uses zero-lag, realtime processing, making video synchronization simple • Has proven long-term reliability, with public installations running for years http://www.holosonics.com/ 6746 From: Rick Hofmann - MICROSEARCH Date: Sun Jan 12, 2003 7:09pm Subject: Antennas I am looking for input from anyone with experience using the Electrometrics or Summitek collapsible antennas. Any information will be greatly appreciated. Very truly yours, Rick Hofmann, CCO, CPP, PI16998 MICROSEARCH, LLC - Electronic Surveillance Detection - Counterespionage Post Office Box 2084 - Cypress, California 90630 714-952-3812 Fax: 714-209-0037 http://home.earthlink.net/~microsearch 6747 From: James M. Atkinson Date: Mon Jan 13, 2003 7:17am Subject: Espionage Case May Face Public Trial Espionage Case May Face Public Trial By Ted Bridis Associated Press Writer Sunday, January 12, 2003; 1:20 PM Washington Post ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- It's the first U.S. espionage trial in nearly 50 years that could end in a death sentence: A retired Air Force master sergeant, deeply in debt, is accused of offering satellite secrets to Saddam Hussein and others for more than $13 million in Swiss currency. Barring a last-minute plea agreement, jury selection was to begin Monday in the case against Brian Patrick Regan in U.S. District Court. His lawyers waged a late, unsuccessful fight to delay the trial because of a possible U.S. invasion of Iraq, one of the countries to whom Regan was accused of offering to sell secrets. Legal experts said a plea avoiding trial this late was unlikely. "I think you can assume any offers that were put on the table have been long-since rejected," said Lawrence S. Robbins. He was the losing defense lawyer in the last espionage trial, in 1997, when a federal jury convicted a married couple of spying for East Germany. Full-blown spy trials in civilian courtrooms are rare. The Justice Department nearly always negotiates a plea agreement, even in cases where espionage has resulted in the deaths of America's foreign agents. That is because the government could suffer embarrassing disclosures of sensitive information in a public courtroom, including hints that could help other spies learn to evade detection and capture. The government also often needs the defendant's help to describe which secrets might have been handed over to foreign governments. Leverage to negotiate a plea is so powerful that prosecutors complain about threats from defense lawyers that a public trial could expose their secrets. "The government has to choose between dropping the charge or revealing the information," said Michael Woods, a former chief in the FBI spy-hunting unit that investigated Regan. Citing national security, U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee barred the public and reporters from attending some earlier hearings in Regan's case. Defense lawyers have pored over classified documents for weeks at the federal courthouse inside a secure room where cellular telephones and pagers are not allowed. Two other lawyers in the 1997 espionage case with Robbins, James Clyde Clark and Joseph John McCarthy, are among four court-appointed attorneys for Regan. In that case, Therese Marie Squillacote, a former Defense Department lawyer, was sentenced to nearly 22 years in prison; her husband, Kurt Alan Stand, got more than 17 years. Regan retired from the Air Force in August 2000 to work for a defense contractor in the National Reconnaissance Office. He was pulled off a flight to Zurich, Switzerland, at Dulles International Airport one year later by FBI spy-hunters, who had been secretly following him and videotaping him inside his office for months. The FBI said it found on Regan a spiral notebook with codes describing images of a missile launcher in the northern no-fly zone over Iraq and of another launcher in China. Agents said Regan also carried, tucked inside his right shoe, addresses he found on the Internet showing locations for embassies in Switzerland and Austria for the governments of Iraq, China and Libya. On Regan's home computer, the FBI said it found a dramatic letter drafted to Saddam offering details about American satellites that could help Iraq hide its anti-aircraft missiles. The letter demanded $13 million in Swiss francs and complained that movie stars and athletes make more money. "If I am going to risk my life and the future of my family, I am going to get a fair price," the letter said. Court records indicate that Regan, a father of four, carried debts of at least $53,000 at the time. Prosecutors have said they would introduce Regan's credit-card and banking records during the trial. Regan has pleaded innocent to three counts of attempted espionage and one additional count of illegally gathering national security information. The Bush administration has taken an unusually aggressive posture against Regan, pledging to seek the death penalty if he is convicted. That is despite government indications it has little evidence Regan actually turned over any information and no evidence anyone died as a result of any alleged disclosures. In espionage cases against the CIA's Aldrich Ames or the FBI's Robert Hanssen, the spying was tied directly to the executions of U.S. agents overseas. Following plea agreements, both were sentenced to life without parole. "It does seem rather a perverse reality," said Paul Stevens, the legal adviser to the White House National Security Council in 1987. "But the paramount interest here is in preserving and protecting national security." No U.S. citizen has been executed in an espionage case since Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in June 1953, for revealing nuclear bomb secrets to the Soviet Union. The death penalty was re-enacted in 1994 as a punishment for peacetime espionage, although none of 11 people indicted for espionage since then has faced it. "This may reflect a calculation on the part of the government that they need to show they are willing to try these cases," said Stewart Baker, former general counsel for the National Security Agency. "We're in a climate when the importance of maintaining secrets is likely to get a favorable response from a jury." Regan's lawyers have spent much of their time focused on the threat of the death penalty, which they criticize as "arbitrary and irrational." In one court filing, defense lawyers called his letter to Saddam "the alleged rantings of a retired Air Force master sergeant prepared in what appears to be an effort to scam a foreign government out of $13 million." Defense lawyers also have indicated they would introduce evidence about Regan's mental health during any penalty phase, to help him escape a death sentence. © 2003 The Associated Press -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The First, The Largest, The Most Popular, and The Most Complete TSCM, Bug Sweep, Spy Hunting, and Counterintelligence Site on the Internet. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- James M. Atkinson Ph: (978) 546-3803 Granite Island GroupFax: (978) 546-9467 127 Eastern Avenue #291http://www.tscm.com/ Gloucester, MA 01931-8008mailto:jmatk@t... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vocatus atque non vocatus deus aderit -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6748 From: Ben Evans Date: Sun Jan 12, 2003 0:42pm Subject: Re: Yaesu FT90-R mods www.mods.dk is the best place for this type of mod to be found. -Ben At 11:15 AM 1/12/2003 +0200, you wrote: >I have a Yaesu FT90-R (which is a great radio) which I use primarily for UHF >comms on 407-409 Rx, 417- 419 Tx on a + 10 Meg repeater system. > >Secondary comms are simplex in the 407 - 409 range and this is a problem for >me as Tx is blocked below 410.00 . > >Does anyone have a modification around this block. > >Private replies please. > >Andy Grudko (British), Grad I.S, South Africa >SIRA investigators Reg. No. 8642 >www.grudko.com , andy@g... . Est. 1981. International investigations >(+27 12) 244 0255 - 244 0256 (Fax). >IPA, SACI, WAD, CALI, UKPIN, IWWA. >When you need it done right - first time > > > > > >======================================================== > TSCM-L Technical Security Mailing List > "In a multitude of counselors there is strength" > > To subscribe to the TSCM-L mailing list visit: > http://www.yahoogroups.com/community/TSCM-L > > It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. > It is by the juice of Star Bucks that thoughts acquire speed, > the hands acquire shaking, the shaking is a warning. > It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. >=================================================== TSKS > >Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ ----------------------------------------------- Counter Intelligence Solutions Group, Inc. http://www.cisginc.com/ Corporate Website http://www.spywholesalers.com/ Covert Cameras http://www.slantback.com Just for fun 585.889.2321(v) 585.889.0823(f) ----------------------------------------------- 6749 From: The Inhabitant Date: Sun Jan 12, 2003 5:29pm Subject: Spy King This “spy king” who was caught by this United States may have known how to acquire electronic bugs, but has not knowledge of the law. Ref: Title 18 USCA section 3401 The Warrant is invalid that was used to arrest Frank Jones’s liberty. Ref: Title 28 USCA section 601 et. seq. The Federal Magistrate has no authority to move, unless the unknowing respondent involuntarily volunteers to controvert its singular innocence. Ref: Title 18 USCA section 3041 Not only did the Magistrate fail to append its signature as required by law, but it has failed to effectuate the seal of its office. Ref: Title 28 USCA section 638c This particular covert agent apparently had no Intel on the laws of this United States. Ref: Title 28 USCA FRCP Rule 1, 2, 4, 9, 12 This Spy King was not convicted of any crime. It simply involuntarily volunteered for a criminal contempt in equity that which has not standing in law. Ref: Title 5 USCA section 701 et. seq. here on the banks of the Choptank, off the shores of the Chesapeake Bay, stands this Inhabitant upon the Land Consensus Tollit Errorem Communis error facit jus Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act. George Orwell --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.443 / Virus Database: 248 - Release Date: 1/10/03 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6750 From: AccessOneNetworkNorthwest AONNRecords Date: Sun Jan 12, 2003 11:17pm Subject: Foolish Frank Jones was foolish. I read the entire file and was astounded. I could see a master spy who would feign weakness in order to lead potential adversaries to believe that his capabilities were unsecure and low level, thus he could then dance circles around them, but Jones had no plan. His mind was gone and he didn't know what the hell he was doing - he didn't know what century it was. More alarming was was his blatant proliferation of restricted technology and the raising of awareness of things which most shouldn't be concerned with. Frank Jones was no SpyKing. The brief was most hilarious as well as frightening. Thank God for counter espionage. AONN --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 6751 From: Hawkspirit Date: Mon Jan 13, 2003 9:17am Subject: Equipment for sale Date: Sun, 12 Jan 2003 21:11:20 -0000 From: "j7lionrush " Subject: Counter measures gear for sale All the equipment is new in box unless indicated and what I paid for it. What I'm asking is in ( ). Or best offer. 1. DP-19 $295.00 ($270) 2. TT-46 $395.00 ($370) 3. TD-20 $295.00 ($270) 4. WIDE BAND MICRO B.D. $295.00 ($270) 5. TE-4200 $395 ($370) 6. JM-20&SAFELINE $495.00 ($450) 7. CPM 700 $2525.00 (USED) ($2200) As I mentioned before all items except the CPM 700 are NIB. I also have the following items I'm trying to off load: Steiner Binos:10x50 Police. NIB ($500.00/$300). 10x30 Nighthunter, NIB.($300/$250) US Armor Body Armor custom made w/trauma plate, used, ex. condition. ($275) Elec. lock pick, NIB, best offer Lockaid Tool, NIB, best offer Master Pick Set, NIB, best offer High-Tech Pick Set, NIB, best offer Lock pick equip. made in US, (exept for elec. lock pick). Hatch lrg/x-lrg, slash guard gloves, new. Best offer. 2 pair. Various elec. c-s manuals/books, I'll throw in no charge. Anything you buy, I'll pay the shipping and insurance. Please respond privately by e-mail if interested. John M. Leontieff Alliance Security and Investigations 2510 Leach Ct. S.E. Olympia, WA 98501 (360) 709-0369 WA. State License 601886548 Member NAIS 6752 From: Date: Mon Jan 13, 2003 9:04am Subject: Testing Just wanted to see if I was able to get through. Because of SPAM I had to change e-mail accounts. Thanks.