Scary SWAT situation

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http://www.ocregister.com/news/home-emami-county-1894171-ellis-system

Man charged with hacking into 911 system
Authorities say Randall Ellis, 19, hacked into the county's 911 system
By SALVADOR HERNANDEZ
The Orange County Register
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LAKE FOREST - SWAT officers expected to find a victim shot to death, drugs and a belligerent armed suspect when they surrounded the home of an unsuspecting couple but found they were only a part of a false emergency call caused by a teenager who hacked into the county’s emergency response system, authorities said.

As officers swarmed the home with assault rifles, dogs and a helicopter, a Lake Forest couple and their two toddlers inside their home slept unsuspectingly.

On March 29 at 11:30 p.m., authorities said Randall Ellis, a 19-year-old from Mukilteo. Wash., hacked into the county’s 911 system from his home and placed a false emergency call, prompting a fully armed response to an unsuspecting couple that could have ended tragically.

Thinking that a prowler was roaming his back yard, a resident of the home, identified only as Doug B. in the District Attorney’s complaint filed in court, walked outside with a kitchen knife as SWAT officers from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department waited with assault rifles.

“It was just a horrifying experience,” said Doug B., who requested not to be identified further. “You think you feel safe in your own home. We had no idea what was going on.”

Doug B. and his wife did not feel safe in their home for weeks after incident and wondered why their home was the one selected.

Doug B. was not able to go back to sleep for hours that night, and he rigged the doors and windows before he was able to go to bed.

“I thought someone was in my back yard, and they were going to get my family,” he said. “It was terrifying for months afterward.”

Officers apprehended and cuffed the resident and his wife, identified as Stacy B. It was moments later they learned the call was false, said Lt. Mike McHenry of the South County Investigations Bureau.

“The danger is significant,” said Lt. Don Barnes, chief of police services for Lake Forest. “That (situation) played out OK, although it scared the victims significantly.”

Ellis is expected to appear in an Orange County courtroom Monday to face charges of computer access and fraud, false imprisonment by violence, falsely reporting a crime and assault with an assault weapon by proxy.

“It’s not a prank,” Emami said. “People’s lives were in danger.”

Ellis allegedly selected the couple’s name and address at random and electronically transferred false information into the 911 system, said Farrah Emami, spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

Authorities believe this is not the only time that Ellis has done this. As part of their investigation, authorities believe Ellis created similar false SWAT responses in Bullhead, Ariz.; Millcreek Township, Penn.; and in his hometown of Mukilteo, Wash.

False 911 calls are placed all the time, McHenry said, but this is the first time someone has hacked into Orange County’s system and created a false call in this way.

“We’ve seen nothing like this,” McHenry said. “This was unique. This was pretty serious.”

Other law enforcement agencies have seen similar breaches into their 911 systems as part of a trend picked up by computer hackers in the nation called “SWATting”, Barnes said.

The purpose is to create a false 911 call that appears to be coming from the residence in question and prompt a SWAT response from local law enforcement agencies, Barnes said.

Authorities would not divulge details on how Ellis hacked into the system, stating that doing so would jeopardize the investigation and possibly create copycats. But the call that prompted a full response to the Lake Forest home started as a call to the Orange County Fire Authority as a drug overdose and progressed into a possible murder, McHenry said.

A supposed teenager stated someone had overdosed on cocaine. The teenager then stated he had been shot in the shoulder and that attackers were going to go shoot and kill his sister, he said.

Canines, a helicopter and SWAT officers responded to the false call.

“It was a pretty large response,” McHenry said.

Through electronic forensics, investigators were able to link Ellis to the false call, Emami said.

Ellis does not appear to have a criminal record, Emami said, but it looks like he’s done this before. He was taken into custody by authorities in Mukilteo on Friday. He waived extradition Monday in court and is expected to appear in Orange County Superior Court Oct. 22 for an arraignment hearing.

Now Doug B. said he is hoping that the upcoming court proceedings can shed some light into why this happened and why his family was targeted.

“My family is my life and to feel like its being threatened is horrifying,” he said.

Contact the writer: [email protected] or 949-454-7361
 
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i think the next many years of his life will be uncomfortable o_O

thats just plain scary, if someone had died would he be charged with murder?
 
I would not put him in jail over something like this! That's too harsh; just make him pay back the cost of the call. The total cost! Include the salaries for all the responders, investigators, administrators, accountants, maintenance crew’s, all the overtime payments, all the fuel expenses, all the maintenance expenses for the vehicles and aircraft. I don't think a $1,000,000 would be too far off from the total bill. 1st responder/emergency services activities are very expensive. He shouldn't be in jail; he needs to be working like a dog to pay off this bill!
 
Ellis is expected to appear in an Orange County courtroom Monday to face charges of computer access and fraud...

Ellis allegedly selected the couple’s name and address at random and electronically transferred false information into the 911 system, said Farrah Emami, spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

I gotta wonder how he hacked it. It would be completely irresponsible to have such a critical system accessible via the public internet. Yet it wouldn't surprise me at all. Most folks these days put too much undeserved faith in system security.
 
I would not put him in jail over something like this!

This kid needs to be in jail and working it off. He did this to more than one place and others were across state lines which makes it a Federal Case. If this boy if found to have created false calls in other states you better believe he is going to jail.

Plus this kid will not be allowed to own use or even look at a computer for a long time after this little bout of FUN PRANKING.
 
I would not put him in jail over something like this! That's too harsh; just make him pay back the cost of the call.
What if you came home and found this young man had broken into your home and was making phone calls from your phone? Hacking into a computer system is no different from breaking and entering. That's not even to mention the danger he put people in.
 
I gotta wonder how he hacked it. It would be completely irresponsible to have such a critical system accessible via the public internet. Yet it wouldn't surprise me at all. Most folks these days put too much undeserved faith in system security.

Reporters know as little about hacking as they do about guns.

The kid probably used some voice over IP line to show his victims caller ID information instead of the real info.

The purpose is to create a false 911 call that appears to be coming from the residence in question and prompt a SWAT response from local law enforcement agencies, Barnes said.

You don't have to hack into anyone's 911 system to do that, I do it on my phone all the time. When I place calls from my home VoIP connection, they caller ID on the other end shows up as my work number. Many older 911 systems only use the caller ID to do a lookup, not a circuit ID from the SS7 network. And many of the newer VoIP services like Vonage depend on a static handmaintained database of name/address for 911 since there is no "circuit" in the traditional sense.

That's relatively easy to do. Bottom like is this is not really "hacking" but 3 guns and 200 rounds is not an "arsenal" either.

Remember the press is out to sell papers, not report truth.
 
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Yet another example of why we need to implement public caning.

However should the prank have turned tragic and someone been killed then I'd be for a needle in the arm for punishment.
 
now think if that man was a responsible citizen and owned a gun. he could very easily have been shot dead because of some kid screwing around.
 
Reporters know as little about hacking as they do about guns.

The kid probably used some voice over IP line to show his victims caller ID information instead of the real info.
+1. We had some people post fake entries on a local onlin police blotter, as the blotter had the password to post in plain text in the page source :banghead: The news said they "hacked" into it, as did the police. Last I heard, they were debating charging them with cyberterrorism or somesuch BS.

This upstanding individual needs to do a couple days in the slammer for this.
 
Kids think it's cool to be hackers, or even wanna-be hackers. Unfortunately, they never really grow up since they spend all their time on the computer instead of doing real things in the real world. This kid will be banned from comps for a few years, a few more of probation, and then will be back at it, if he hasn't been at it all along anyway. He will likely learn nothing about what kind of harm he causes until someone is dead, and even then write it off in his mind as someone else's screw up. Perhaps such negativity is not THR, but it's a good possibility.
 
I agree that this kid should do some time and have to pay $, but i think that pinning false imprisonment by violence and assault with an assault weapon by proxy on him is a stretch.

I find the existance of the charge of assault with an assault weapon by proxy just messed up... I can't imagine how many more "laws" there are that you'd never guess existed and can't understand the purpose of.
 
I am not so sure the kid did not perform a public service. Computer systems that can be so easily faked need to have some kind of upgrade applied. If he had not hacked it, the authorities would never fix the real problem.

I am not a big fan of hackers, but they provide a necessary service to computer systems security. There is really no other way to test system security than to actually test it.

In many ways, what the authorities are claiming is that it is the hacker's fault they not only did not lock their front door, they didn't even have a front door. That is their fault, not the hacker's.

I am surprised there are no diatribes regarding the indiscriminate use of SWAT. Maybe they got deleted.
 
I am not so sure the kid did not perform a public service. Computer systems that can be so easily faked need to have some kind of upgrade applied. If he had not hacked it, the authorities would never fix the real problem.

This is nothing new, it's a well known issue. It's not going to be fixed anytime soon.

In fact, with the growth of VoIP services it will likely become more common.

Although Wiki isn't always the greatest, if you do a search there for "Enhanced 911" you can get a feel for what a mess this is.
 
Hopefully in a few more years when the first real computer generation grows up and takes charge, this will become less of a problem. We still live in a time where most adults don't know jack #### about computers, voip, or any kind of cyber security. Maybe when they retire and todays young adults movie in, people who grew up not being afraid of computers will be able to handle this kind of stuff properly.
 
I agree that this kid should do some time and have to pay $, but i think that pinning false imprisonment by violence and assault with an assault weapon by proxy on him is a stretch.

This wasn't a harmless prank. Someone, the homeowner most likely, could easily have been killed or seriously injured.

I think the charges are appropriate. If the homeowner had been killed by the police, who were acting on the best info available, I think a felony murder charge against the 19 y.o. old would be appropriate.

Now, the police should upgrade their system, but that doesn't mitigate the very real danger this guy put the homeowners and the police in.
 
assault with an assault weapon by proxy
That is a new one. Wouldn't you actually have to be shot for it to be assault, otherwise isn't it just brandishing or threatening? If I point a gun at someone I have not assaulted them, if I fire it becomes assault with a deadly weapon. So how was the victim assaulted? I understand there was law breaking involved in the false 911 call, but you could claim the kid had no control over what SWAT would do. I'm not trying to defend the guy, but how do they figure an assault charge?
 
ACtually, as I was taught in a low level college law class, Assault is defined by the victim being afraid for their safety. The example was an airport employee having his ID badge grabbed by an irate passenger wanting his name. the passenger was charged with assault.

Anyway, the danger could have been removed easily by a simple phone call from Doug B. I know if I have reason to get up at night and arm myself, whether it be my pistol or a baseball bat, thats good enough reason to call the cops for backup. I don't need to be a lone hero and take on an unknown number of bad guys solo. If he had called the cops himself and reported that there was an intruder in his yard and he was armed and ready to defend himself till the cavalry arrived, they just might have noticed that it was a number they were already responding to.
 
This is kind of off topic, but one of the other posts made me think it. DMK wants to toss him in prison, and someone else mentioned caning.

He SHOULD be punished. Unfortunately, prison nowadays means having your teeth knocked out and raped in the a**. There doesn't seem to be an in between. I don't think we should throw non-violent offenders in with those who will commit far worse crimes on them than they themselves ever committed.

I'm starting to think that not only is public caning cheaper and more effective, I think it's probably far less brutal than time in a prison.

I'd take 50 lashes over 5 years.
 
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