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HACKERS' OFF HOOK, PROPERTY RETURNED By Danna Dykstra Coy This article appeared in the Telegram-Tribune Newspaper, San Luis Obispo, CA. April 12, 1991. Permission to electronically reproduce this article was given by the newspaper's senior editor. ***** Two San Luis Obispo men suspected of computer tampering will not be charged with any crime. They will get back the computer equipment that was seized from their homes, according to Stephen Brown, a deputy district attorney who handled the case. "It appears to have been a case of inadvertent access to a modem with no criminal intent," said Brown. San Luis Obispo police were waiting on Brown's response to decide whether to pursue an investigation that started last month. They said they would drop the matter if Brown didn't file a case. The officer heading the case, Gary Nemeth, admitted police were learning as they went along because they rarely deal with computer crimes. Brown said he dosen't believe police overreacted in their investigation. "They had a legitimate concern." In early March two dermatologists called police when the computer system containing patient billing records in their San Luis Obispo office kept shutting down. They paid a computer technician about $1,500 to re-program their modem, a device that allows computers to communicate through the telephone lines. The technician told the doctors it appeared someone was trying to tap into their system. The computer's security system caused the shutdown after several attempts to gain access failed. Police ordered a 10-day phone tap on the modem's line and, after obtaining search warrants, searched four residences where calls were made to the skin doctors' modem at least three times. One suspect, Ron Hopson, said last week his calls were legitimate and claimed police overreacted when they seized his computer, telephone, and computer manuals. Hopson could not reached Thursday for comment. Brown's investigation revealed Hopson, like the other suspects, was trying to log-on to a computerized "bulletin-board" that incorrectly gave the doctors' number as the key to a system called "Cygnus XI". Cygnus XI enabled computer users to electronically send messages to one another. Brown said while this may not be the county's first computer crime, it was the first time the District Attorney's Office authorized search warrants in a case of suspected computer fraud using telephone lines. Police will not be returning several illegally obtained copies of software also seized during the raids, he said. ###