Tag Archives: federal government

Rita

Before anyone else calls to ask if we’re going to drown…I don’t think so. The hurricane is currently projected to head up the east edge of Texas. It has weakened down to category 4 again, and Austin is just outside the edge of its projected path.

So, we’ll get some strong winds and thunder and lightning and a load of rain, but that should be about it. We’re on a hill, well above the flood plain around the river.

Meanwhile in Houston, things are grim. It looks like an attempted mass exodus; people have seen dead bodies floating in the water, and don’t want their family to end up like that. An eyewitness reports:

Local news stations report that TXDOT (Texas Department of Transportation) is opening inbound lanes to outbound traffic on I-45 North now, and Highway 290 West and I-10 West later. Traffic is now moving at a crawl when it moves at all and some people have run out of gas after having been on the road for 12 to 24 hours. There is now almost no gas left anywhere in the city.

So if you were asking why all those stupid people in New Orleans didn’t evacuate, you can definitely now STFU.

There’s been some mild panic in Austin too. Clearly watching the Federal Government leave New Orleans to drown has freaked people out. The local grocery stores have had a run on bread and bottled water.

Social Security Numbers: A Modest Proposal

Yet again, a business has been cavalier with tens of thousands of people’s personal data . If your W-2 was processed by PayMaxx in the last few years, any number of people might have read it. There could be thousands of identity thefts as a result.

Yet it’s not really PayMaxx who will be at fault if identity theft occurs. The real problem is that too many businesses use Social Security Numbers (SSNs) for authentication.

SSNs aren’t unique, they aren’t secret, and they were never intended to be used as universal identifiers, let alone authentication tokens. However, the relative obscurity of SSNs has led many businesses to misuse them to verify identity, even though they are completely unsuitable for the purpose.

The simple and obvious solution would be for the US government to legislate prohibiting use of SSNs for any purpose other than identifying taxpayers and social security recipients to the federal government. The legislation would be set to take effect some time at least 12 months in the future, to give companies plenty of time to issue new identity numbers to their customers.

It seems obvious to me that that will never happen, however. Too many corporations with a vested interest in cross-referencing their databases with everyone else’s, and no motivation to spend money on real security.

But I contend that we don’t need to wait for government to act. As I’ve already mentioned, SSNs aren’t actually secret. It’s apparently pretty easy for any random company to get a database of SSNs, and it seems clear that hackers can obtain such databases too. So let’s try a thought experiment…

Suppose a secretive band of hackers obtains a large database of SSNs, ideally the SSNs of the majority of people in the USA. They take out prominent ads in the major national newspapers, announcing that as of January 2007, the database of SSNs will be made available to anyone who wants it, via the Internet.

Companies misusing SSNs would have a simple choice: either stop doing so, or face massive fraud against them in 2007. Shareholders wouldn’t give them much choice.

On January 2007, the database of SSNs is published anonymously to the Internet.

Of course, the perpetrators of this civic act would need to be careful to remain anonymous, lest they suffer a hailstorm of lawsuits, possibly even spurious claims of ‘terrorism’. But in the end, we would live in a better world–one where SSNs were clearly only useful for identification.

In case you missed it…

Authorities have located weapons of mass destruction. Actual weapons of mass destruction, enough illegal chemical weapons to kill thousands of Americans. The weapons were located on American soil.

For years, William Krar lived with his common-law wife Judith Bruey in New Hampshire. Krar first came to the attention of police in 1985, when he was arrested in New Hampshire for impersonating a police officer. In 1989, he started fighting back against the Federal government in the traditional New Hampshire style—he stopped paying taxes.

Then in 1995, Krar was investigated by authorities. They discovered he was linked to a network of anti-government and white supremacist organizations in New Hampshire. Still, nothing unusual about that, so they dropped the inquiry.

Soon, Krar and Bruey had moved to Tyler, Texas. Then in January 2003, Krar was stopped by a state trooper in Tennessee. Inside Krar’s rental car the trooper found 2 handguns, 16 knives, a stun gun, a smoke grenade, a gas mask, and 40 bottles filled with an unknown substance. Coded documents labeled “trip” and “procedure” listed rendezvous locations across the US. You might think that that would be suspicious enough to get the attention of Homeland Security, but you’d be wrong.

Krar’s schemes were finally revealed to the FBI by accident. Krar mailed five fake ID cards to a member of the New Jersey Militia. One was a fake ID for the Pentagon; another was a fake Social Security Card. Also enclosed was a note saying “We would hate to have this fall into the wrong hands.” Unfortunately for Krar, the envelope was misdelivered, and the recipient called the police.

As a result, FBI investigators began monitoring Krar’s mail, as well as his (common law) wife’s. They discovered that Krar and Bruey were renting three lockup garages from Teresa Staples, and that they visited them every day. Each garage was piled high with clothing and garden equipment; Staples thought they were gardeners, or that they resold gardening supplies at flea markets.

FBI agents were more suspicious, and took a closer look. They discovered a cache of weapons hidden behind the gardening equipment. So they checked Krar’s home in Tyler, Texas, and discovered more.

The eventual haul totalled 500,000 rounds of ammunition, 65 pipe bombs, remote controlled briefcase bombs, machine guns, silencers, land mines, and plain old explosives. Krar wasn’t licensed to hold automatic weapons; I don’t know if Texas issues landmine licenses. The weapons cache wasn’t the disturbing part, however…

Teresa Staples realized something was seriously amiss when a team of agents turned up in HazMat suits. The FBI had opened an ammunitions canister and found nearly a kilo of sodium cyanide, packed next to a quantity of acid sufficient to dissolve it into cyanide gas. Enough cyanide gas to kill literally thousands of people, if released in an enclosed space like a stadium or subway.

There were also anti-Semitic, racist and anti-government publications in the lockups, in case you hadn’t guessed. The KKK had even left a business card.

Krar and Bruey have plead guilty to all charges, as has Edward Feltus, the person who was supposed to have received the fake IDs. While Feltus faces up to 15 years in jail, Bruey will be out in less than five. Krar’s crime of possessing dangerous chemical weapons is sufficiently rare that authorities don’t seem to have gotten around to setting minimum sentencing guidelines. Krar’s lawyer is pointing out that there’s no evidence he actually planned to use the cyanide bomb.

It could have been a bigger mass-murder than 9/11. The Justice Department seems keen to publicize victories in the war against terrorism, so why haven’t we heard more about this story?

Perhaps because the story isn’t over. More cyanide was found in Krar’s house, and in his car. Authorities think he might have already sold cyanide bombs to various right-wing militia organizations.

Last month, a letter laced with ricin nerve toxin was sent to the Senate. Last November, one was sent to the White House. The perpetrator of the anthrax attacks of 2001 is still at large. Sleep well.

[Guardian/Observer link]

Military justice

Still think you’ll be able to sleep? Check out This American Life from last week:

Act One. Until the End of the War. There are at least two American citizens being held without charges, unable to see lawyers, in military jails in the U.S. There may be more. Jack Hitt tried to find out everything he could about one of them: Jose Padilla, who will stay confined to a brig in South Carolina “until the end of the war” according to the White House.

Act Two. Secret Trials and Secret Deportations. In the war on terror, the government is rounding up foreigners, checking their immigration status, and then, sometimes, deporting them. It won’t give out their names. David Kestenbaum tried to find out everything that can be found out about who these new deportees are … and about what happened to them once they were seized and put on trial, in secret. To do this, he has to bypass the federal government (which won’t say much about the deportees) and head overseas, to talk with them firsthand.

Act Three. Secret Wiretaps from a Secret Court. For over two decades, there’s been a secret court in the United States called the FISA court (short for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act). Its job is to authorize wiretaps on possible foreign spies and foreign agents. In 24 years, it has never turned down a government request for a wiretap, as best as any outsider can tell—until this year. This past summer the court said issued an opinion that said Attorney General John Ashcroft and the Justice Department were going way too far in their zeal for wiretaps. It cited 75 cases in which the Justice Department tried to sneak around rules to protect Americans from surveillance. Blue Chevigny reports on attempts to loosen up the rules on who the government spies on here in the U.S., and on this first-ever glimpse inside this secret court.

[RealAudio playlist]

Fleet bank about to get what it deserves?

Fleet Bank is heavily invested in Argentina—where the economy has collapsed, and Fleet is having to restrict customers to withdrawing less than $1000 a month.

Meanwhile, Fleet has taken a hit of $1.8 billion to cover the money it’s lost in South America, with an overall loss of $507m in 4Q2001. That’s half a billion dollars worse than they predicted. Profits for the full year were down 75%.

Still, your account is FDIC insured, so if the bank goes belly-up the federal government will bail you out. Eventually.