Interesting post in today’s Wired: Threat Level blog about a motion in the Alberto Gonzalez hacking case that was unsealed on Monday. We now have the identities of the other two “mystery” retailers – J.C. Penney was “Company A” and Wet Seal was “Company B.”
J.C. Penney argued unsuccessfully last week to keep the company’s identity under seal, and that it (a corporation) was entitled to anonymity under the 2004 Crime Victims' Rights Act. That law was intended to protect the “dignity and privacy” of victims – and that is what Penney argued. but Judge Douglas P. Woodcock was not convinced -- and in fact was "astonished." The Judge said in the hearing that he believed both retailers should have announced their involvement from the start and that consumers had the right to know. Woodlock said he would not provide the companies “insulation from transparency.”
For more: StorefrontBacktalk » JC Penney, Wet Seal: Gonzalez Mystery Merchants
Motion of Government - http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/threatlevel/2010/03/09-cr-10382-14.pdf
Showing posts with label BJ's Wholesale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BJ's Wholesale. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Gonzalez Hearing: More than 40 MILLION Distinct Credit Card Numbers Recovered
Evan Schuman of StorefrontBacktalk has an interesting piece about last week’s plea in the massive credit card fraud case currently in federal court. Albert Gonzalez pleaded guilty in federal court in the cyberthief case and the plea hearing revealed some remarkable details. According to testimony, the Secret Service has collected “more than forty million distinct credit and debit card numbers from two computer servers” controlled by Gonzalez and his associates and has counted the consumer, retail and bank victims as “an enormous number of people, certainly millions upon millions, perhaps tens of millions.”
Schuman points out that the plea hearing may be the first and last details that we receive because the plea has avoided a federal trial.
Schuman points out that the plea hearing may be the first and last details that we receive because the plea has avoided a federal trial.
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