RE: Prosecutors: CIA agents left trail

2005-08-03 Thread Tyler Durden

Reverse Rendition?

Here's where Liberals can take a stand...let's round up some of these 
fuckers and stuff 'em in a shipping container on a Chinese barge to Italy.


I've done a quick google search and I've only found a couple of the names. 
Is the complete list available?


-TD


From: Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Prosecutors: CIA agents left trail
Date: Wed, 3 Aug 2005 15:22:04 +0200

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/07/28/cia.phonetrail.ap/index.html

Prosecutors: CIA agents left trail
Cellphone calls blew their cover

Thursday, July 28, 2005; Posted: 8:05 p.m. EDT (00:05 GMT)

ROME, Italy (AP) -- It wasn't their lavish spending in luxury hotels, their
use of credit cards or even frequent-flier miles that drew attention. 
Instead

it was a trail of casual cellphone use that tripped up the 19 purported CIA
operatives wanted by Italian authorities in the alleged kidnapping of a
radical Muslim cleric.

Italian prosecutors who have obtained arrest warrants for the 19 -- none of
whom are believed to be in Italy -- presented evidence that the suspects 
used

at least 40 Italian cell phones, some in their own names.

Experts say that either they were bumbling spies, or they acted with 
impunity

because Italian officials had been informed of their plan -- a claim the
government of Premier Silvio Berlusconi has publicly denied on several
occasions. (Full story)

"If these were really CIA agents they've made a disaster," said Andrea 
Nativi,

research director for the Rome-based Military Center for Strategic Studies.
"They strained relations between Italy and the U.S. and between the CIA and
Italian intelligence agencies."

Italian judges issued a first batch of warrants last month for 13 Americans
accused of abducting Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, known as Abu Omar, on a 
Milan

street on February 17, 2003.

Another court this week issued another six warrants for a group the
prosecution claims planned the abduction. (Full story)
Vulnerable cellphones

The Egyptian cleric was flown from Aviano, a joint U.S.-Italian air base 
north

of Venice, to Ramstein Air Base in Germany and then to Egypt, where he was
reportedly tortured. The operation purportedly was part of the CIA's
"extraordinary rendition" program, in which terror suspects are transferred 
to

third countries without court approval.

In his request for the latest warrants, prosecutor Armando Spataro wrote 
that
an analysis of mobile phone traffic showed that most of them were present 
on

the route that Abu Omar habitually took from his home to a Milan mosque,
"including in the days before" the kidnapping.

A track of their cell phones also showed them on those streets "nearly 100
times" during the month before Abu Omar's disappearance, the prosecutor 
said.
He concluded that the six were part "of a single group of Americans who 
came

to Milan to carry out the operation."

Why they would use their cell phones so openly has baffled experts,
particularly since prosecutors are certain that not all the names of the 19
suspects are aliases.

One has been identified by prosecutors as the former CIA station chief in
Milan, Robert Seldon Lady, who owns a retirement home in wine country in 
Asti,
near Turin. Though police didn't find Lady there when they raided the 
house,

they did discover a list of hotels where U.S. government employees received
discounts, including hotels where prosecutors contend the suspects stayed.

Another person on the list has the same name as a man who now works at the
U.S. Embassy in Tanzania.

Unless the power or the wireless antenna is turned off, a mobile phone 
remains
in constant contact with the nearest cell towers even when it's not being 
used
for a call. Information processed by the cells can be used to precisely 
locate

or track the movements of a phone user.

Nativi, the military expert, called the use of regular cell phone accounts 
"a

huge weakness in the operation."

It would have been more difficult to track anonymous prepaid cards, 
satellite

phones or radios, he said.

The wireless system used in Italy and most of the rest of Europe relies on 
a

stamp-sized smart card that is inserted in the back of every handset. This
removable "SIM" card stores an individual's phone number and other account
data.

A unique numerical identifier is assigned to every phone and every SIM, 
said
Bruno Errico, director of consulting for Openwave Global Services, a 
company
that provides tracking applications and other software to wireless 
companies

worldwide.

Wireless companies are obliged by law to keep records of the unique data 
that

each phone exchanges with the cell network as well as the numbers to which
calls are placed, he said.

Since a phone is served by several cells at any given time, investigators 
can

easily triangulate the locat

Prosecutors: CIA agents left trail

2005-08-03 Thread Eugen Leitl

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/07/28/cia.phonetrail.ap/index.html

Prosecutors: CIA agents left trail
Cellphone calls blew their cover

Thursday, July 28, 2005; Posted: 8:05 p.m. EDT (00:05 GMT)

ROME, Italy (AP) -- It wasn't their lavish spending in luxury hotels, their use 
of credit cards or even frequent-flier miles that drew attention. Instead it 
was a trail of casual cellphone use that tripped up the 19 purported CIA 
operatives wanted by Italian authorities in the alleged kidnapping of a radical 
Muslim cleric.

Italian prosecutors who have obtained arrest warrants for the 19 -- none of 
whom are believed to be in Italy -- presented evidence that the suspects used 
at least 40 Italian cell phones, some in their own names.

Experts say that either they were bumbling spies, or they acted with impunity 
because Italian officials had been informed of their plan -- a claim the 
government of Premier Silvio Berlusconi has publicly denied on several 
occasions. (Full story)

"If these were really CIA agents they've made a disaster," said Andrea Nativi, 
research director for the Rome-based Military Center for Strategic Studies. 
"They strained relations between Italy and the U.S. and between the CIA and 
Italian intelligence agencies."

Italian judges issued a first batch of warrants last month for 13 Americans 
accused of abducting Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, known as Abu Omar, on a Milan 
street on February 17, 2003.

Another court this week issued another six warrants for a group the prosecution 
claims planned the abduction. (Full story)
Vulnerable cellphones

The Egyptian cleric was flown from Aviano, a joint U.S.-Italian air base north 
of Venice, to Ramstein Air Base in Germany and then to Egypt, where he was 
reportedly tortured. The operation purportedly was part of the CIA's 
"extraordinary rendition" program, in which terror suspects are transferred to 
third countries without court approval.

In his request for the latest warrants, prosecutor Armando Spataro wrote that 
an analysis of mobile phone traffic showed that most of them were present on 
the route that Abu Omar habitually took from his home to a Milan mosque, 
"including in the days before" the kidnapping.

A track of their cell phones also showed them on those streets "nearly 100 
times" during the month before Abu Omar's disappearance, the prosecutor said. 
He concluded that the six were part "of a single group of Americans who came to 
Milan to carry out the operation."

Why they would use their cell phones so openly has baffled experts, 
particularly since prosecutors are certain that not all the names of the 19 
suspects are aliases.

One has been identified by prosecutors as the former CIA station chief in 
Milan, Robert Seldon Lady, who owns a retirement home in wine country in Asti, 
near Turin. Though police didn't find Lady there when they raided the house, 
they did discover a list of hotels where U.S. government employees received 
discounts, including hotels where prosecutors contend the suspects stayed.

Another person on the list has the same name as a man who now works at the U.S. 
Embassy in Tanzania.

Unless the power or the wireless antenna is turned off, a mobile phone remains 
in constant contact with the nearest cell towers even when it's not being used 
for a call. Information processed by the cells can be used to precisely locate 
or track the movements of a phone user.

Nativi, the military expert, called the use of regular cell phone accounts "a 
huge weakness in the operation."

It would have been more difficult to track anonymous prepaid cards, satellite 
phones or radios, he said.

The wireless system used in Italy and most of the rest of Europe relies on a 
stamp-sized smart card that is inserted in the back of every handset. This 
removable "SIM" card stores an individual's phone number and other account data.

A unique numerical identifier is assigned to every phone and every SIM, said 
Bruno Errico, director of consulting for Openwave Global Services, a company 
that provides tracking applications and other software to wireless companies 
worldwide.

Wireless companies are obliged by law to keep records of the unique data that 
each phone exchanges with the cell network as well as the numbers to which 
calls are placed, he said.

Since a phone is served by several cells at any given time, investigators can 
easily triangulate the location of a device, Errico said. In an urban area, 
where the network of cells is dense and overlapping, such tracking can have a 
margin of error of just a few yards.
Going uncovered

Had the agents used non-Italian phones and SIMs, the local network would still 
have tracked them, but magistrates might have had a tougher time linking the 
phones to each of the suspects since not all countries require wireless users 
to provide identification, said Erri