t byfield on Sat, 6 Jun 1998 20:23:16 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Mitnick trial update |
<http://olj.usc.edu/sections/news/98_stories/ojrnews_mitnick3.htm> May 20, 1998 Mitnick on Trial: A Victory for the Defense By Doug Thomas, OJR Staff Columnist Today's hearing in the Mitnick case in federal district court in Los Angeles was a hearing on discovery, to determine both what evidence will be used in the prosecution of Kevin David Mitnick, as well as what evidence Mitnick and his defense team will be allowed to review in preparing their defense. A second issue, setting Mitnick's trial date, will be put off due to prosecution and defense counsel's inability to find a mutually agreeable start date. The prosecution, which is anxious to begin trial, is pushing for an October start date, while Mitnick's court-appointed defense counsel, Don Randolph, has other commitments that would prohibit him from starting the case until mid-January. During the hearing, it was revealed that Tsutomu Shimomura, the computer security expert who helped the authorities track down and apprehend Mitnick, will not testify as part of the government's case-in-chief. While this does not preclude the possibility of Shimomura testifying in rebuttal or even for the defense, Shimomura's absence does signal that the prosecution will be relying heavily on evidence seized from Mitnick's computers. The status of Shimomura's testimony makes today's rulings by the court even more significant because he is the central figure in the arrest of Mitnick. Judge Mariana Pfaelzer ruled that the government must produce a copy of any evidence that will be presented against Mitnick in the upcoming trial. This includes material that the prosecution has been unwilling to copy previously, including proprietary source code, "hacker tools" and access codes such as passwords, credit card numbers and phone codes. The only thing that Judge Pfaelzer denied to the defense was a copy of the encrypted files that the government is holding and is unable to decipher. The encrypted data still posed a problem for the court. As it stands, government officials are holding the encrypted files and have no idea of their contents. The defense claims that information in those files may prove exculpatory, but revealing their contents to the government would violate Mitnick's Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination. Further, prosecutors have indicated that they will not be using the encrypted files against Mitnick, but they refuse to return the evidence because they do not know what information the files hold. Ultimately, the court sided with the prosecution. Judge Pfaelzer described Mitnick as "tremendously clever to put everyone in this position" but indicated that "as long as he [Mitnick] has the keys in his pocket, the court is going to do nothing about it." Even without the encrypted data, today's ruling was a "major victory" for the defense, according to Mitnick's attorney, Randolph. The ruling will allow Mitnick's defense team and experts to review all of the information to be used against him. Under this new ruling, copies of the evidence will be stored at the defense counsel's office and will be able to be printed out for review by defense experts and Mitnick himself. Further, Mitnick will have access to the electronic materials at a specially designed off-site discovery room. The court found the government's limitation of three visits per month unreasonable, and has ordered the prosecution to come up with a plan for greater access. Defense and government attorneys are set to sit down this week and come up with an order that will allow all of the conditions to be met. By next week, Judge Pfaelzer will review that order, make the final decisions about evidence and discovery, and set a trial date. ------------------------------------- Doug Thomas <mailto:douglast@usc.edu> is a professor at the Annenberg School for Communication. His column, Hacker Alert <http://olj.usc.edu/sections/departments/hacker.htm>, appears monthly in OJR. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl