I posted this days ago complete with pics of the kid and his father. you
are late as normal for all libtards.
On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 9:00 AM, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> The following article explains how a Democrat state lawmaker's son in
> Tennessee has apparently hacked into S. Palin's e-mail account.
>
> While no charges have been laid, daddy is trying desperately to
> disassociate himself from any knowledge of what his son was doing in
> their family home. I had no knowledge or anything," "I was not a party
> to anything of this nature at all," he said. "I wasn't in on this -
> and I wouldn't know how to do anything like that." "I had nothing to
> do with it" Alright we believe you already!!
>
> And why would he be interested in Sarah Palin's e-mails? God forbid
> that he would lower himself into the gutter by using a little juicy
> tidbit he might learn from her e-mails that could be used to discredit
> her (especially as she doing fine job on her own)
>
> This part is where it gets a bit too much for my sensitive stomach.
> The McCain campaign confirmed the break-in and called it a "shocking
> invasion of the governor's privacy and a violation of law." Did you
> get that? It's "shocking invasion of the governor's privacy and a
> violation of law." Shocking, shocking, shocking!
>
> The Republican's find this violation of the law and Palin's privacy
> absolutely repellent. And so they should, as the new laws passed by
> congress clearly state, only the government is permitted to spy on the
> private communications of its citizens, not the other way around.
>
> The young culprit could be forgiven for thinking that the law allowed
> the hacking of confidential and private communications of all those
> that are US citizens regardless of their status, making invasion of
> privacy a democratic act. The one hitch of course is his daddy is a
> law maker (whatever that means) and that may prove to be a hitch for
> our young hero. Of course it could be argued that reading Sarah
> Palin's e-mails is a fate worse than death and let the boy go free
> with periodical psychiatric observation.
>
> The important thing is that all illegal wire tapping by the government
> is legal, even when when it wasn't legal, just to be on the safe side.
>
> I really hate to labor the point, but are any Democrats concerned that
> Obama voted for the latest amendments that make you have to worry who
> are talking to and what you say in private?
>
>
>
> Democrat's son searched over Palin hack.
>
> September 24, 2008
>
> The FBI searched the residence of the son of a Democratic state
> lawmaker in Tennessee over the weekend looking for evidence linking
> the young man to the hacking of Republican US vice presidential
> candidate Sarah Palin's personal e-mail account, two law enforcement
> officials have told The Associated Press.
>
> David Kernell, 20, has not returned repeated phone calls or e-mails
> from the AP since last week. He is the son of state Representative
> Mike Kernell, a Memphis Democrat and chairman of Tennessee's House
> Government Operations Committee. The father declined last week to
> discuss the possibility his son might be involved in the case.
>
> "I had nothing to do with it, I had no knowledge or anything," Mike
> Kernell told the AP. "I was not a party to anything of this nature at
> all," he said. "I wasn't in on this - and I wouldn't know how to do
> anything like that."
>
> A hacker last week broke into one of the Yahoo e-mail accounts that
> Palin uses, revealing as evidence a few inconsequential personal
> messages she has received since John McCain selected her as his
> running mate. The McCain campaign confirmed the break-in and called it
> a "shocking invasion of the governor's privacy and a violation of
> law."
>
> Palin used "gov.sarah" in one of her Yahoo e-mail addresses she
> sometimes uses to conduct state business. The hacker targeted her
> separate "gov.palin" account.
>
> After the break-in, a person claiming responsibility published a
> detailed chronology of the hacking on the Web site where the break-in
> was first revealed. That person identified his e-mail address as one
> that has been linked publicly to David Kernell.
>
> Experts said the hacker apparently left an easy trail for
> investigators.
>
> "He might as well have taken a picture of his house and uploaded it,"
> said Ken Pfeil, an Internet security expert. "He should have just set
> up a big beacon that said, 'Here's my house,' or confessed. If they
> can't catch this guy based on all the information posted on the Web
> then all bets are off."
>
> The hacker described guessing correctly that Alaska's governor had met
> her husband in high school, and knew Palin's date of birth and home
> postcode. Using those details, the hacker tricked Yahoo's service into
> assigning a new password, "popcorn," for Palin's e-mail account. What
> started as a prank was cut short because of panic over the possibility
> the FBI might investigate, the hacker wrote.
>
> The FBI and Secret Service are now investigating.
>
> The law enforcement officials confirming the search spoke on condition
> of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigation.
>
> In Washington, Justice Department spokeswoman Laura Sweeney confirmed
> Monday only that the FBI conducted "investigative activity" late
> Saturday and early Sunday in Knoxville related to the case.
>
> David Kernell is an economics major at the University of Tennessee
> there.
>
> >
>
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