Hackersβ Excellent Adventures
Padillac’s aim bump v1
In fact, huddled over his Toshiba laptop, with rock music blaring from his bedroom stereo and Jerry Springer flickering on the TV, the Sheepshead Bay resident looks like any other teenager, albeit one experiencing maximum sensory overload, 1998-style.
But actually Gilson is part of a nationwide networkof teenage computer hackers who have stolen everything from Internet accounts to credit card numbers, a cybergang that has flourished despite a yearlong effort by the FBI to curb this online piracy, the Voice has learned. βIβve stolen accounts and stuff like that. I didnβt even think it was that big of a deal,β Gilson said. βEverybody does it.β
For months, federal investigators have been serving subpoenas and search warrants at the homes of these young hackers, carting away computers, disks, modems, and other items as parents watch in horror. Agents with the FBIβs computer crimes squad have recently raided homes across the metropolitan areaβfrom Brooklyn to the New Jersey suburbsβas part of a probe into wide-scale credit card fraud and other cybercrimes.
In several instances, agents visited the same residences more than once β first in mid 1997 and then again earlier this year β because some young hackers were undeterred by the federal probe. According to one court record, a hacker recently boasted to a friend that βnothing could be done to him because he was a minor.β
One federal investigator acknowledged that while βitβs tough to prosecute a juvenile,β the FBI is βnot always sure youβre gonna find a teenagerβ at βthe end of the string.β The source added, βAnd if you do, it still doesnβt mean the game is off, because if the damage is severe enough it is still a crime and itβs still a problem.β
Since the probe is ongoingβand every target appears to be underage β
investigators have tried to keep details of the case confidential, including whether any teenagers have been arrested on federal charges. But interviews with several subjects of the criminal inquiry and a confidential FBI document obtained by the Voice provide a detailed look at the current investigation.
The federal probe began last spring, when agents learned of the βmassive deployment of a password-stealing programβ on the Internet, according to the FBI document. The scheme targeted accounts on America Online (AOL), the nationβs largest online service. AOL is a favorite nesting place for young hackers, who congregate in chat rooms with names like Dead End and Island 55. βFifteen seems to be the preferred age for an AOL hacker,β said one long-in-the-tooth 18-year-old hacker.








