Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Your Personal INFO

Dear Jane, We all know you and NUMEROUS OTHER (read ALMOST ALL) officers have fine homes on the river and many many south tampa properties you also hide as the meth profits are laundered. BUT, the point is the public records DO NOT BELONG TO YOU AND TO DAVID GEE. They belong to THE PUBLIC. David Gee is not applying the statute as he SHOULD. So, maybe your cellphone will join these one day. No one will call you because no one likes you enough to do so.

And tell Old Norma HI. Old Norma has most of her "people" in place tormenting others and none of you falsely promoted LEO type have a problem with that. Of COURSE.


Hackers post W.Va. police officers' personal info
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 8, 2012 10:01 AM EST
More US NewsReport: Teacher's aide sent love letters to boyMo. teen gets life with possible parole in killing30 more airports will test lower-hassle screeningHackers post W.Va. police officers' personal infoCongress tries to give president line-item vetoMore US News CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Hackers affiliated with the Anonymous hacking group obtained more than 150 police officers' personal information from an old website for the West Virginia Chiefs of Police Association and posted it online.

William Roper, the association's president, told the Charleston Gazette ( bit.ly/zLZxrB) the FBI is investigating. Roper is also the police chief of Ranson, W.Va.

Roper said a group called CabinCr3w hacked the website Monday and obtained the home addresses, home phone numbers and cellphone numbers of current and retired police chiefs. The association has a new website but members' information was stored on the old website's database.

"It's a tragedy someone was able to hack our website and obtain information that is useful to our members," Roper said.

In an online message by CabinCr3w addressed to "citizens of West Virginia," the hacking group says it has been monitoring cases of police brutality.

"We are here to remind you that we the taxpayers pay your exorbitant salaries, and those salaries of your officers," the message says. "Your job is to protect and serve, not brutalize the very people that pay your wages. Muzzle your dogs of war, or we will expose more of your sensative (sic) information."

Clarksburg, W.Va., Police Chief Marshall Goff and Charleston, W.Va., Police Chief Brent Webster were among those whose information was posted by the hackers. Both told The Associated Press on Wednesday they have been contacted by the FBI about the incident.

"Like any of the public out there, we are at times victims also," Goff told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Goff said he does not believe the hacker group accomplished anything because his information is already publicly accessible.

"My number is published in the book because I feel that as an official figure I need to be accessible to the public," he said.

Webster said he was not overly concerned because he did not provide much information on the website.

"But I don't like it," he said.

Roper said CabinCr3W is affiliated with the hacking collective Anonymous and CabinCr3w's Twitter page is laced with references to the larger hacking group.

Last week, Anonymous hit the web with a slew of hacks, including releasing a recording of a conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard in which law enforcers discussed how to stop the hacking group.

Anonymous also claimed credit for defacing the Boston Police Department's website. And in Salt Lake City, officials said the personal information of confidential informants and tipsters had been compromised.

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Information from: The Charleston Gazette, www.wvgazette.com



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