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COMPUTING

From...
Civic.com

LawNet brings states together to fight cybercrime

police

January 17, 2000
Web posted at: 11:40 a.m. EST (1640 GMT)

by L. Scott Tillett

(IDG) -- Attorney General Janet Reno proposes a cooperative network should be built to enable law enforcement agencies across the country to share information on electronic crimes.

The proposal, delivered at a meeting of the National Association of Attorneys General, calls on state attorneys general to set up an around-the-clock network of computer crime agents within every state, enabling authorities that uncover a crime in one state to work quickly with counterparts in other states to track down cybercriminals.

Reno's proposal came amid news reports that a computer hacker had stolen 300,000 credit card numbers through the World Wide Web site of music retailer CD Universe and posted some of the numbers on the Web.

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"While the Internet and other information technologies are bringing enormous benefits to society, they also provide new opportunities for criminal behavior," Reno said. "The Internet changes everything -- and it's changing law enforcement in dramatic ways."

Bubby Moser, executive director of the National Sheriffs' Association, said he supports Reno's proposal for a cooperative network on cybercrimes -- dubbed LawNet by Reno.

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"All this [communication] has to be in place," Moser said. "And [Reno] is right on top of it."

Moser said plans for a network should encompass all levels of law enforcement -- from local governments to federal agencies to foreign law enforcement organizations. An international scope to sharing cybercrime information already is emerging, with the Justice Department recently setting up an information-sharing network on cybercrime with G-8 nations.

Reno's proposal also includes developing a secure online clearinghouse of information that federal, state and local law enforcement agents could access to share information on pending cases, potential targets of computer crime and contact personnel for crimes on the Internet. Moreover, the proposal suggests the creation of regional computer forensics labs that would enable state and local law enforcement agencies to pool resources to investigate computer crimes. It also calls on states to work on jurisdictional issues when cybercrimes involve more than one state.

"I think this [proposal] is a good idea. One of the problems has been venue issues," said Michael Anderson, president of Gresham, Ore.-based New Technologies Inc., a computer forensics firm that works with state, local and federal law enforcement agencies.

Anderson said figuring out which law enforcement agency has jurisdiction proves a challenge when a cybercriminal is in one state and the victim is in another. "The first thing to do is to get communications going between the different states. The jurisdictional issues will follow," he said.

Communicating quickly is important in cybercases because electronic evidence can disappear fast as data on high-traffic Internet servers get replaced by fresh data. "What happens in these things is you have to move very quickly before the evidence goes away," Anderson said.

Reno has urged state attorneys general to develop a framework for LawNet by March.


RELATED STORIES:
Reno calls for 'LawNet' to stop Internet crime
January 12, 2000
Rebuffed Internet extortionist posts stolen credit card data
January 10, 2000
Governments ready to fight cyber-crime in new millennium
January 2, 2000
Feds leave doors open for hackers
December 22, 1999

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