Your phone records are for
sale
Chicago Sun-Times
BY FRANK MAIN Crime Reporter
January 5, 2006
The Chicago Police Department is warning officers their cell phone records
are available to anyone -- for a price. Dozens of online services are selling
lists of cell phone calls, raising security concerns among law enforcement and
privacy experts.
Criminals can use such records to expose a government informant who
regularly calls a law enforcement official.
Suspicious spouses can see if their husband or wife is calling a certain
someone a bit too often.
And employers can check whether a worker is regularly calling a psychologist
-- or a competing company.
Some online services might be skirting the law to obtain these phone lists,
according to Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), who has called for legislation to
criminalize phone record theft and use.
In some cases, telephone company insiders secretly sell customers'
phone-call lists to online brokers, despite strict telephone company rules
against such deals, according to Schumer.
And some online brokers have used deception to get the lists from the phone
companies, he said.
"Though this problem is all too common, federal law is too narrow to include
this type of crime," Schumer said last year in a prepared statement.
The Chicago Police Department is looking into the sale of phone records, a
source said.
Late last month, the department sent a warning to officers about
Locatecell.com, which sells lists of calls made on cell phones and land
lines.
"Officers should be aware of this information when giving out their personal
cell phone numbers to the general public," the bulletin said. "Undercover
officers should also be aware of this information if they occasionally call
personal numbers such as home or the office, from their [undercover] ones."
Test got FBI's calls in 3 hours
To test the service, the FBI paid Locatecell.com $160 to buy the records for
an agent's cell phone and received the list within three hours, the police
bulletin said.
Representatives of Data Find Solutions Inc., the Tennessee-based operator of
Locatecell.com, could not be reached for comment.
Frank Bochte, a spokesman for the FBI in Chicago, said he was aware of the
Web site.
"Not only in Chicago, but nationwide, the FBI notified its field offices of
this potential threat to the security of our agents, and especially our
undercover agents," Bochte said. "We need to educate our personnel about the
dangers posed by individuals using this site and others like it. We are
stressing that they should be careful in their cellular use."
How well do the services work? The Chicago Sun-Times paid $110 to
Locatecell.com to purchase a one-month record of calls for this reporter's
company cell phone. It was as simple as e-mailing the telephone number to the
service along with a credit card number. The request was made Friday after the
service was closed for the New Year's holiday.
'Most powerful investigative tool'
On Tuesday, when it reopened, Locatecell.com e-mailed a list of 78 telephone
numbers this reporter called on his cell phone between Nov. 19 and Dec. 17. The
list included calls to law enforcement sources, story subjects and other
Sun-Times reporters and editors.
Ernie Rizzo, a Chicago private investigator, said he uses a similar cell
phone record service to conduct research for his clients. On Friday, for
instance, Rizzo said he ordered the cell phone records of a suburban police
chief whose wife suspects he is cheating on her.
"I would say the most powerful investigative tool right now is cell
records," Rizzo said. "I use it a couple times a week. A few hundred bucks a
week is well worth the money."
Only financial info protected?
In July, the Electronic Privacy Information Center filed a petition with the
Federal Communications Commission seeking an end to the sale of telephone
records.
"We're very concerned about Locatecell," said Chris Jay Hoofnagle, senior
counsel for the center. "This is the company that sold the phone records of a
Canadian official to a reporter 'no questions asked.' "
Schumer has called for legislation to criminalize the "stealing and selling"
of cell phone logs. He also urged the Federal Trade Commission to set up a unit
to stop it.
He said a common method for obtaining cell phone records is "pretexting,"
involving a data broker pretending to be a phone's owner and duping the phone
company into providing the information.
"Pretexting for financial data is illegal, but it does not include phone
records," Schumer said. "We already have protections for our financial
information. We ought to have it for the very personal information that can be
gleaned from telephone records."
fmain@suntimes.com
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