UPDATE, 05/19/04
How the story was sourced
Sources at city hall and within the police department both acknowledged that
the hackers had contacted Quigley prior to the hack on the Nextel site.
One highly placed and trusted source
stated that in an official conversation with utils director John Lane, Lane had stated that
Quigley had given out the password info in exchange for minutes on his
personal cell phone. According to the source, Lane stated that Quigley had
admitted this to Lane.
That, in and of itself, was not entirely
convincing. For one thing, Lane is not known for being entirely truthful
when it comes to dealings within his department. For another, Lane is not
the most technically savvy guy on the planet -- during one presentation at
city council, Lane's comments made it clear that he did not understand the
difference between e-mail and a web page when he referred to an article on
this site as "webmail."
Of another concern was: how would Quigley
have known the password, anyway? This is still a troubling question.
A decision was made to sit on the story
unless an independent and closer source would provide confirmation. That
source turned out to be Quigley himself. On May 17, Quigley was contacted by
phone and asked about the incident. This would be the first of three phone
conversations between Quigley and myself, the second and third conversations
are recounted in the sidebar story (gray area on the right side of the page,
above).
In this first phone conversation, Quigley was asked if he had received the bogus survey phone call
from the hackers. Quigley responded, "How did you find out about that? Who
told you?"
Quigley was
then asked if he had given out passwords and account info to the hackers,
and Quigley responded with "I only gave them that info because I thought
they worked for Nextel." Quigley continued to ask "Who told you about this?"
Finally, when Quigley was asked if he had
given the info out in exchange for free minutes, he hung up.
Not entirely comfortable with the source
chain on the password part of the story but relieved by Quigley's own
statement, the story was run with repeated references to inside sources. The
word 'reportedly' was used repeatedly. I was comfortable with the fact that
John Lane had made the statements accusing Quigley of coughing up
the passwords, but I wasn't entirely convinced that Lane was being
truthful.
Nevertheless,
Lane is the director of utilities and the city has, by default, placed its
trust in him. When a department head states that he has received an
admission from an employee that password info was given out and then the
employee himself gives a non-denial denial, that's enough for a story,
albeit a carefully worded one -- hence the repeated use of the word
'reportedly.'
If Quigley
has a different version of events and he's actually willing to talk about it
without any more threats, he knows this web site is good for a cup of coffee
and a bagel.
UPDATE 05/23/04
Quigley cleared of wrongdoing, did not give out passwords
The utilities supervisor did, however, give out enough info
to allow hackers to eventually make bogus purchases in the city's name
Utils director John Lane spoke in error when he told other city officials
that utils supervisor Quigley had given out passwords to Nextel hackers.
According to our sources, Quigley never
gave out passwords because (1) he didn't know them, and (2) they did not yet
exist. Quigley did participate in a bogus survey given by the hackers. In that
survey, Quigley gave out information about the city's Nextel cell phones to
hackers posing as Nextel employees, enough
information for the hackers to contact Nextel and convincingly pose as city
employees. The hackers, using information provided by both Quigley and Nextel,
then created the web account on Nextel's web site in the city's name, including
the creation of web site access passwords. This, in turn, allowed the hackers to
order $1500 worth of cell phones on the city's tab.
Venice Florida! dot com had stated
reservations about the password portion of the story (see footer update above,
dated 05/19/04). Our reservations were based on two things: we couldn't
understand how Quigley could possibly have known the passwords and the fact that
the end source for the password part of the story was utils director John Lane.
In spite of his position as director, we have found Lane to repeatedly be an
incredibly unreliable source when it comes to getting information about the
utilities department that he runs.
There's a bit more to this story that we
are not allowed to talk about as the matter is still under investigation, but
the bottom line is this: Quigley did not give out actual passwords, although he
did unwittingly give out enough information to the hackers that they were able
to proceed to the next level of their hack.