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Noose tightening on Palin Hacker

Hunt for Palin's hacker shaping up to be simple case By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer
Tue Sep 23, 5:56 AM ET

WASHINGTON - The hunt for the hacker who broke into Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin's personal e-mail account is shaping up to be a remarkably simple investigation, by the standards of major cybersecurity whodunits.


U.S. investigators figure the hacker claimed responsibility in a detailed accounting that included his own personal e-mail address and that he tried to cover his trail using a U.S. Internet anonymity service that has been surprisingly cooperative with the FBI in efforts to peel away that anonymity.

Not exactly the plot of a Hollywood thriller.

In what may be a significant break in the case, the FBI searched the residence of the son of a Democratic state lawmaker in Tennessee over the weekend looking for evidence linking the young man to the break-in, two law enforcement officials told The Associated Press. The apartment the FBI searched is in a complex about five blocks from the University of Tennessee campus, in a neighborhood popular with students.

David Kernell, 20, has not returned repeated phone calls or e-mails from the AP since last week. His lawyer said Monday the family is going through a difficult period. Kernell is an economics major at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

"The Kernell family wants to do the right thing, and they want what is best for their son," said attorney Wade V. Davies of Knoxville. "We are confident that the truth will emerge as we go through the process. David is a decent and intelligent young man, and I look forward to assisting him during this difficult period."

Kernell is the son of state Rep. Mike Kernell, a Memphis Democrat and chairman of Tennessee's House Government Operations Committee. The father declined last week to discuss the possibility his son might be involved in the case.

"I had nothing to do with it, I had no knowledge or anything," Mike Kernell told the AP last week.

"I was not a party to anything of this nature at all," he added. "I wasn't in on this — and I wouldn't know how to do anything like that."

No one answered the door at Mike Kernell's home in Memphis on Monday, and he did not return repeated phone calls Monday from the AP.

Palin's e-mail account with Yahoo Inc. was compromised last week by a hacker who revealed as evidence a few inconsequential personal messages she has received since John McCain selected her as his running mate. The McCain campaign confirmed the break-in and called it a "shocking invasion of the governor's privacy and a violation of law."

Palin used "gov.sarah" in one of her Yahoo e-mail addresses she sometimes uses to conduct state business. The hacker targeted her separate "gov.palin" account.

During the break-in, the hacker used an Internet address that traced to David Kernell's apartment complex in Knoxville. The FBI obtained logs Saturday establishing the connection from Gabriel Ramuglia of Athens, Ga., who operates an Internet anonymity service used by the hacker.

Ramuglia told the AP the FBI asked him to confirm that the address appeared in his records. Ramuglia said his logs showed the hacker visiting Yahoo's mail service, resetting Palin's password and announcing results of the break-in on a Web site where the hacking was first disclosed.

"I think he just didn't realize the severity of what he was doing until afterwards," Ramuglia said.

After the break-in, a person claiming responsibility published a detailed chronology of the hacking on the same Web site. That person identified his e-mail address as one that has been linked publicly to David Kernell.

Kernell's father, Mike Kernell, has a strait-laced reputation among his colleagues.

"Mike Kernell is your quintessential Boy Scout," said state Rep. John Deberry, another Democrat. "Mike follows the rules. He will almost get on your nerve as far as making sure things are done by the book."

"If Mike had known anything about this, he would have had a fit on his son," Deberry said. "When I saw his reaction when he first heard about it, the absolute fear and shock that was on his face, I realized then he had absolutely nothing to do with it."

Experts said the hacker apparently left an easy trail for investigators.

"He might as well have taken a picture of his house and uploaded it," said Ken Pfeil, an Internet security expert. "He should have just set up a big beacon that said, 'Here's my house,' or confessed. If they can't catch this guy based on all the information posted on the Web then all bets are off."

___

Associated Press writers Ted Bridis in Washington, Erik Schelzig and Lucas L. Johnson II in Nashville, Tenn., and Beth Rucker in Knoxville contributed to this report.

created by Darkseid on Sep 23, 2008 at 09:07:15 am     Comments: 7

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Comments ... #

"Hacker" is used loosely here. Whoever it is guessed a couple security question answers using freely available data online.

posted by toledolen on Sep 23, 2008 at 10:52:49 am     #  

Whoever it is, they should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. But this is also a lesson: it shows the danger of conducting sensitive government business by email and then using passwords that are easily guessed. Almost the equivalent of leaving private documents on the front seat of your unlocked car with the windows down.

posted by Ace_Face on Sep 23, 2008 at 02:41:47 pm     #  

Palin was using her yahoo account to circumvent subpoenas for her government email account, so was her staff. The hacker should have distributed all her emials en masse in order to give us the freedom of information act rights that will have been circumvented by Palin use of a yahoo account for government "business" which really involved getting around the law.

posted by prime3end on Sep 23, 2008 at 03:48:53 pm     #  

Vigilante justice doesn't work and the hacker potentially violated the rights of people absolutely unrelated to your allegations. My guess is that you would have a serious problem if a Planned Parenthood office was broken into and all patient records were released because someone accused them of performing an illegal abortion.
Regardless, no jail time... the crime's not a high level and his dad's a politician.

posted by cmhguy on Sep 23, 2008 at 05:49:06 pm     #  

Small correction. No jail time-his Dad's a DEMOCRAT.

posted by Darkseid on Sep 23, 2008 at 08:13:36 pm     #  

She's big into security. Or lulz.

It's nice that she uses a commercial companies' email to conduct public affairs.

Isn't that illegal?

posted by charlatan on Sep 23, 2008 at 08:46:33 pm     #  

I think the initial illegal acts were by Palin and her staff, the emails even detail that they are using a non gov email account to avoid subpoenas they know are coming for their govt emails.

If something illegal is being done, the act of trying to unveil them is a citizens duty, not a crime in the eyes of at least most juries, and the law gives a break to people who violate they cross into someone else's rights while they are engaged in crime.

The kid saw evidence of a crime and he went to get it.

Palin was trying to communicate in a manner that would avoid the law and the investigators that are on her tail.

posted by prime3end on Sep 23, 2008 at 09:39:43 pm     #  

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