http://latimes.com/editions/orange/la-000013258feb21.story?coll=la%2Deditions%2Dorange

By JACK LEONARD, TIMES STAFF WRITER

A mysterious Canadian computer hacker who allegedly stole an electronic
diary purporting to detail the sexual fantasies of an Orange County
judge admitted to authorities that he's hacked into thousands of other
computers, according to a police affidavit made public this week.

The hacker's credibility--and whether he worked on behalf of
authorities--is emerging as a central question in the case against Judge
Ronald C. Kline, who stands accused of downloading child pornography to
his home and courthouse computers.

The hacker worked with Canadian police on at least one high-profile
child porn case, the police affidavits said, but he was also suspected
of possessing pornography and under investigation by the U.S. Customs
Bureau. The hacker, who was not named in the affidavit, describes
himself as a "predator hunter" who accessed a diary and pornographic
images on Kline's computer, which was eventually turned over to
authorities last summer, the affidavit states.

Irvine detectives and federal agents used the hacker's evidence to
obtain a search warrant of Kline's home and courthouse computers.

The search unearthed more than 100 images of photographs showing young
boys engaged in sex acts.

But in their latest court filings, Kline's defense attorneys attacked
the hacker's credibility, saying that taking the judge's diary was
illegal and suggesting that the hacker was working on behalf of law
enforcement at the time.

If a judge agrees that the hacker was indeed a police agent, the
computer evidence could well be thrown out of court.

Defense attorneys also raised the possibility that the hacker could have
doctored the diary and computer images that form the bedrock of federal
prosecutors' case against Kline.

"A person who can" hack, wrote attorney Paul S. Meyer in the court
papers filed last week, "can also enter a personal computer secretly and
alter its contents and add materials not previously present."

The latest filings offer the best portrait yet of the shadowy figure
whose computer work ultimately led to last November's federal grand jury
indictment of Kline, who also faces separate state child molestation
charges. Kline has pleaded not guilty to the federal charges and is
running for reelection on the March 5 ballot.

Irvine police learned about the hacker's infiltration of the judge's
computer from Julie Posey, founder of the Colorado-based Internet
watchdog group, Pedowatch, which received an anonymous tip along with
Kline's diary from the hacker.

The hacker, the affidavit says, told Posey he was working as an
informant for customs agents.

The computer diary detailed intimate thoughts that the author described
about boys he met at an Orange County Little League baseball club,
particularly about one 13-year-old player.

"I gave a lot of thought today about this business of approaching these
kids too fast," the diary says, according to the affidavit. "You have to
make them come to you or it doesn't work."

After receiving the diary, Irvine detectives were left with the task of
trying to track down the hacker, documents show. They finally found him,
even though the anonymous tipster did his best to hide his tracks.

Hacker Said to Be on Both Sides of Law

The hacker did not return e-mails from investigators. Customs officials
served a summons for information from the company that provided the
hacker with an e-mail account. But the address turned out to be phony.

Irvine Det. Ron Carr eventually discovered a Web site the hacker was
operating. He called Vancouver police to help contact the company that
owned the site.

But the Canadian police said they actually knew all about the operator
of the site, who turned out to be the hacker Carr was searching for.

The hacker, the Royal Canadian Mountain Police told Carr, was "essential
in the apprehension" two years ago of a father suspected of offering his
8-year-old daughter for sex over the Internet.

Canadian authorities told Carr that the hacker, who allegedly possessed
"large quantities of child pornography," was no longer working as an
informant, according to the court documents.

But the hacker had recently been on the other end of an investigation.
Customs agents told Carr that the hacker was considered a suspect in at
least one federal child pornography investigation last year, the records
state, though they provide no other details about the case.

In August, Carr and a customs agent flew to Langley, British Columbia--a
small town just outside Vancouver--to interview the hacker.

There, he told the officers how he created a virus to infect the
computers of suspected traders in kiddie porn. The virus allowed him to
examine the contents of each machine he infected.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 computers worldwide had been infiltrated by the
virus, he told the officers.

The hacker described his virus as "the Trojan Horse" because it is
attached to an Internet file that is downloaded onto the computer.

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