Information Security News mailing list archives

Computer whiz still faces second lawsuit


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Mon, 20 May 2002 05:21:02 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.mlive.com/news/bctimes/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_standard.xsl?/base/news/1021648510270760.xml

Friday, May 17, 2002
By Crystal Harmon
TIMES WRITER

A teen-age computer wizard has won his legal battle to get the label 
"hacker" removed from his school record, but now the label 
"eavesdropper" may be added to his criminal record.

Nicholas J. Suchyta, 19, allegedly recorded his roommate and her 
boyfriend having sex and also beamed live broadcasts of the activities 
on the Internet early this year. The couple told police they had no 
idea that the five computers in the living room were rigged with a Web 
cam. 

Bay County District Judge Scott J. Newcombe arraigned Suchyta on two 
counts of installing eavesdropping devices and two counts of divulging 
information obtained by eavesdropping. Each felony count carries a 
maximum penalty of two years in prison and $2,000 in fines. Suchyta 
was released from the Bay County Jail on May 8 after posting a $5,000 
bond. 

Suchyta had shared an apartment on North Hampton Road with an 
18-year-old woman who said the two had been best friends since grade 
school. But she said she became concerned when acquaintances said 
they'd seen her having sex on the Internet with her 18-year-old 
boyfriend. 

She told police she found the recordings on one of the computers, but 
as she attempted to download the images for evidence, the computer was 
shut down, apparently from one of the two laptop computers she said 
Suchyta carries with him. 

On Feb. 2, police searched the apartment and found a camera hidden on 
top of one of the computers. With the help of a computer crimes 
expert, they also found four files containing images of the two teens 
having sex that apparently had been broadcast on the Internet. 

Bay City Police also found 14 modems that they determined had been 
taken from Charter Communications, where Suchyta had worked as a 
high-speed data technician. 

Suchyta, who now resides on South Euclid Avenue, declined to comment 
to The Times about the cases. 

Meanwhile, Suchyta and Bay City Public Schools have settled a civil 
suit Suchyta brought against school officials who disciplined him for 
downloading a "hacking" program. The program included instructions for 
capturing log-ins and passwords of system users. 

Suchyta was a co-op student who worked in the student records office 
and the computer lab, and helped make the transition from one type of 
system to the other. Staff turned to Suchyta for help with many 
computer glitches, and, Suchyta said, a secretary gave him the 
password to the student-record program so he could help her update 
vaccination records. 

Later a teacher reported seeing Suchyta browsing student records in 
class, according to testimony given during depositions for the 
lawsuit. Co-op supervisor Michael Kehrier said school officials warned 
Suchyta to stay away from sensitive material, but they allowed him to 
continue his work in the school computer lab. 

The district's technology director said he's reviewed security and 
made some changes. 

"No data is ever going to be 100-percent secure," John Strycker said 
this morning. "But a system is only going to be as secure as the user. 
People that are new to using technology - and in this district it's 
relatively new - might not understand that passwords are like keys and 
you don't just hand them out." 

In November 2000, according to depositions, a Central teacher was 
having trouble with his computer and school technicians ran a virus 
program, which found several files saved on Suchyta's hard drive. 
Suchyta claimed he was simply collecting such information to evaluate 
possible threats to the network, he said. 

Assistant Principal Jonathan Whan suspended Suchyta for five days in 
November 2000, fired him from his co-op job and kicked him out of 
advanced computer classes. In written memos, Whan classified Suchyta's 
actions as "hacking" the computer system. 

Suchyta and his parents, Richard and Shannan, sued the school and Whan 
for defamation of character, invasion of privacy, intentional 
infliction of emotional distress and gross negligence. They also 
accuse school officials of failing to provide copies of computer data 
they requested under Michigan's Freedom of Information Act. 

The Suchytas asked for more than $25,000 each. Their attorney, David 
Skinner, said Thursday that the settlement - forged with help of a 
mediator and yet to be approved by a judge - was amicable. He wouldn't 
comment on a monetary settlement, but acknowledged that the schools 
removed all records of the alleged "hacking" incident from Suchyta's 
permanent record. 

In the suit, Skinner described school officials' handling of the 
incident as "open and hostile." 

"The school district's agents accused a teen-age high school student 
of being a hacker, removed him from the classes found most 
interesting," the complaint reads. "The allegation that Nicholas is a 
hacker creates the presumption in the community that he committed a 
crime, that he is now a criminal." 


 

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