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China denies claims it hacked into Pentagon computers – Telegraph

China denies claims it hacked into Pentagon computers – Telegraph.

The $300 billion (£206bn) jet is being developed by Lockheed Martin and will be bought by eight other countries, including the UK.

However, the Wall Street Journal reported that hackers had broken into the project and siphoned off “several terabytes of data related to design and electronics systems”.

The leak could make it easier to defend against the plane, also known as the F35 Lightning II. However, the spies could not access the most sensitive material, which is kept on computers that are not connected to the internet.

Former US officials said the attacks appear to have originated in China, but there is scant concrete evidence because it is easy to mask identities online.

Chinese officials reacted angrily to the accusation, and a spokesman for the foreign ministry said: “China has not changed its stance on hacking. China has always been against hacking and we have cracked down very hard on hacking. This is not a Chinese phenomenon. It happens everywhere in the world.”

Attacks on the Pentagon are common, but are said to have escalated dramatically in the past six months, and coincide with growing speculation about China’s role in cyber espionage.

A report issued by the Pentagon last month said the Chinese military has made “steady progress” in its online warfare capabilities, a key field in which China can compete with the US.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington called the report “a product of the Cold War mentality” and said accusations of cyber crime were being spread to inflame opinion against China.

At the end of last month, researchers at several universities discovered the existence of GhostNet, a vast internet espionage network that was siphoning information from sensitive computers in 103 countries. One third of its targets were based in embassies, news media and NGOs. The researchers said the majority of GhostNet’s attacks originated from within China but stopped short of accusing Beijing of responsibility.

The security of the Joint Strike Fighter may have been breached before, according to a Pentagon report in 2008. The report said that “the advanced aviation and weapons technology for the JSF programme may have been compromised” because the Defence Department had not kept a close enough eye on the 1,200 contractors involved in the mammoth process. At the time, BAE Systems, the UK arms company, was named as one contractor that might have allowed details to leak. BAE denied that any information on the jet had been compromised.

The UK intends to use the Joint Strike Fighter as a replacement for the Harrier jump jet. More than 2,400 jets will be built in total

read more,, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/5193207/China-denies-claims-it-hacked-into-Pentagon-computers.html

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Easy 24/7 Services leaves traders short

Times are tough enough without the likes of Easy 24/7 Services making them worse.

This lot has gone under and so many people are owed money that the ­liquidator described the list of creditors as “like a telephone directory”.

The firm offered home plumbing, locksmith, electrician and glazing work.

Tim Miles contacted them when he needed a three-metre pane of ­conservatory glass replacing at his North London home.

He paid the company’s Easy 24 Hour Glazing a deposit of £208 in October, which was followed by three broken appointments.

The company blamed a sub-contractor and promised a refund, but that never arrived, so Tim took the firm to the small claims court.

“Easy 24 Hour Glazing had until January 11 to respond,” Tim said. “On January 10 it informed the court it was going into liquidation.”

Too late, he found: “A trawl of the internet will throw up numerous complaints against this company”.

The firm was run from Leigh on Sea, Essex, by Laurence O’Mahony (above), 37, and 33-year-old Julian Bye.

It has now collapsed owing £416,000 to almost a thousand creditors ­nationwide, the vast majority of them being tradesmen.

At the creditors’ meeting, O’Mahony blamed the disaster on other companies going bust, owing Easy 24/7 more than £200,000.

But one angry tradesmen demanded to know what had happened to the £3,000 he was due, telling the meeting: “I contacted the people who we had done the jobs for and they all said they’d paid.”

O’Mahony admitted payments for particular jobs got “mashed up” in the general accounts.

“The problem was we were paying out so much to engineers where we’d been knocked for money. I genuinely don’t want to knock anyone back, it’s not something I wanted to do.”

Source: http://blogs.mirror.co.uk/investigations/2012/02/easy-247-services-leaves-trade.html

He said he was mystified to hear of the situation with Tim Miles. “If a deposit was taken for a job, the job was done.

“We have had problems where we’ve paid an engineer to do a job and he’s disappeared off the face of the Earth, so we’ve had to get another engineer.

“I’ve been trading for four years and we were completing up to 500 jobs a week.

“The whole thing of stuff online saying this is a fraud is not true. I’d be in prison if that was the case. That comes down to competitors posting reviews.”

O’Mahony is now a director of LOM Facilities Management Ltd. Asked what that did, he said “similar trade”.

Hopefully not too similar

Read more.. http://blogs.mirror.co.uk/investigations/2012/02/easy-247-services-leaves-trade.html

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Veteran Broward County locksmith accused of stealing from safes

Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime/veteran-broward-county-locksmith-accused-of-stealing-from-2177076.html

A South Florida locksmith is accused of pilfering from some of the same safes  he was supposed to protect from thieves.

 

Eric Welch, 50, of Coconut Creek, was arrested Thursday in the back of a Home  Depot in Margate after he allegedly cracked opened a safe full of cash that  was bolted to a van’s floorboard.

 

Welch knew about the safe because he was hired to work on it himself months  earlier, according to investigators with the Broward Sheriff’s Office and  the Margate Police Department.

 

Welch is now accused of pulling off at least five other similar heists dating  to 2009. The veteran locksmith appeared in bond court on Tuesday and was  ordered to be held without bond on 13 charges including multiple counts of  burglary and grand theft.

 

In most of the cases, Welch installed a secret combination on a safe he  previously worked on, allowing him easy access to the loot on a later date,  according to an arrest affidavit.

 

While investigators say cases like Welch’s occur only sporadically, veterans  in the lock and safe industry say a lack of regulation makes such things  possible.

 

In Florida, like in most states, locksmiths aren’t regulated, meaning there’s  no licensing, background check or training requirement. Authorities and lock  and safe industry leaders say there’s only so much a consumer can do to  protect himself from a locksmith-gone-bad.

 

“There needs to be regulation as anybody can be a locksmith with a little  training,” said David Welter, of Welter Lock and Safe in Hollywood.

 

Officials with the Associated Locksmiths of America say most of the complaints  against locksmiths are reports of price gauging and shoddy work performed by  people with little to no experience.

 

But, Welch is an experienced locksmith who worked for LockAmerica in Pompano  Beach for the past 18 years. On Tuesday, company owner C.J. Donofrio said  the family business has never had a problem with Welch and described him as  a highly skilled employee. The company is cooperating with investigators,  Donofrio said.

 

“We are embarrassed. People have trusted us for 30 years,” he said. “We still  don’t know what happened to him. It’s like Jekyll and Hyde with him.”

 

According to police and court records, Welch robbed the same Margate sports  bar twice within two months starting in November. He has also been charged  in similar safe burglaries in 2009 at three Wendy’s restaurants in Fort  Lauderdale. Details of the heists at the restaurants were not available  Tuesday.

 

According to one of several arrest reports, Welch used a crowbar to break into  Jesse’s Xtreme Sports Bar in Margate on Nov. 12. Welch then walked directly  to the safe and opened it using a secret combination he installed months  earlier, the report states.

 

On Dec. 26, Welch returned to the same bar, this time smashing a glass door to  get inside, the report says. Investigators said Welch confessed that he  darted to the bar’s office and used the same secret code again.

 

Authorities first made contact with Welch in early January after he tried to  hire an undercover sheriff’s deputy to steal a van used to transport cash to  local ATMs, according to reports. Welch told the deputy he was hired to fix  the safe months earlier and he installed a “bypass” code.

 

On Thursday morning, the deputy called Welch to tell him he found and stole  the van. Welch met up with the deputy behind the Home Depot in the 1100  block of S. State Road 7 in Margate.

 

According to the deputy’s report, Welch slipped into the back of the van and  carried no tools. He punched in a secret code and the safe opened easily.  When Welch turned around, an arrest team swooped in and handcuffed him.

 

Jesse Walcutt, the owner of the bar that was hit twice, said on Tuesday that  the news of the arrest gives him peace of mind. He said he became a  sleepless, paranoid wreck, suspecting his employees were behind the two  heists. After checking all the alibis, Walcutt later convinced himself that  somebody was hacking into his computer where he stored the safe’s  combination.

 

“It boggled my mind wondering how they were getting in,” said Walcutt. “I  thought of every angle and every person, but never thought about the  locksmith.”

 

Walcutt said he’s been using LockAmerica for about a decade and never had a  reason to distrust the company; the owners are old family friends. He said  he will continue to work with the company, believing the incidents were the  work of a rouge employee.

 

“It’s disturbing,” Walcutt said on Tuesday. “I am a very trusting person. I  can’t go on with life distrusting everyone.”

Read more..

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime/veteran-broward-county-locksmith-accused-of-stealing-from-2177076.html

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Locksmith Mark Makowski jailed for ‘bullying’ vulnerable people on doorsteps

Source: http://www.camdennewjournal.com/news/2010/sep/locksmith-mark-makowski-jailed-%E2%80%98bullying%E2%80%99-vulnerable-people-doorsteps

A LOCKSMITH who conned a Kentish Town man out of nearly £1,000 when he carried out an emergency lock change has been jailed for four years.

Mark Makowski, 40, was found guilty on 15 counts of fraud at the Old Bailey on Tuesday and described by His Honour Judge Morris QC as a “thoroughly dishonest man”.

The locksmith, who operated across the capital, was caught following a sting operation by Trading Standards officers, who identified 88 potential victims. Eleven cases were taken to court.

Makowski, from Hertfordshire, quoted between £100 and £200 for a job and then hit some customers with bills between £500 to £1,000.

Lance Tuckett, 72, who lives off Fortess Road, told the New Journal he felt depressed and suffered sleepless nights after his dealings with Makowski three years ago.

Mr Tuckett, a retired manager for stationers Smythson, said he had returned home from a holiday abroad when he discovered he was locked out.

He called Makowski’s company, Pronto Locks, to let him in and change the locks, and was quoted an out-of-hours emergency fee of £290.

When Makow­ski arrived that ­figure began to increase because, he claimed, he hadn’t included the cost of the locks in his quote, or the price of installation. The final bill was more than £1,000.

“I was outraged, but the thing is, I needed security, so I said, ‘oh ok’,” said Mr Tuckett.

He added: “I was also 69 when it happened, and I had just got off a very long flight. I was tired and felt vulnerable.”

After Mr Tuckett asked for locks from manufacturers Chubb and Yale, Makowski told him they would cost around £700.

“It wasn’t until the next day that I noticed the five lever lock was a cheap Chinese piece of rubbish that didn’t even have a kite mark,” said Mr Tuckett. “It was bastardised, which didn’t comply with my insurance, I knew – plus he had damaged the door.”

It cost Mr Tuckett, who moved to Kentish Town seven years ago after caring for an elderly relative following his retirement, a mere £160 to replace the locks and get the door repaired by a reputable locksmith.

After giving evidence at Makowski’s trial, Mr Tuckett said: “I felt such a bloody old fool. I felt it was my fault that I got conned.

“I was just feeling depressed and had difficulty sleeping sometimes.

“Knowing I wasn’t the only one he conned does make one feel better, but it also makes me feel better knowing he’s been locked up and will be kept out of the way for a little while.”

Makowski was given three and a half years for fraud and an extra six months to run consecutively as one of his scams took place while he was on bail. He stands to be released on licence after two years.

His Honour Judge Anthony Morris QC, told Makowski: “You’ve shown a total lack of remorse and shown yourself to be a thoroughly dishonest man. You deliberately targeted a substantial number of members of the public – persons who had been burgled or were locked out, and usually in a desperate and vulnerable state.”

He added that Makowski was an “unpleasant bully” who was “riding roughshod over any opposition to your business methods”.

Sue Jones, Head of Trading Standards at neighbouring Westminster City Council, which set up a sting operation along with the DTI-backed Scambusters that helped trap Makowski, said: “We are delighted that justice has finally caught up with this trader, who charged his customers large sums of money for a very poor quality and often totally unnecessary work.

“We hope the fact that his activity was proved to be fraudulent sends out a clear message to other traders who may be tempted to behave in this way.”

• Mark Makowski will feature in the BBC’s Watchdog programme later this month

Read more.. http://www.camdennewjournal.com/news/2010/sep/locksmith-mark-makowski-jailed-%E2%80%98bullying%E2%80%99-vulnerable-people-doorsteps

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Man cleared of assaulting burglar twice with his car

Source: http://www.irishexaminer.com/news/man-cleared-of-assaulting-burglar-twice-with-his-car-184040.html

 

The businessman cleared of assaulting a burglar  he struck twice  with his Mercedes car last night said: “I’m glad it’s all over.” He  said he  wouldn’t go “through this ordeal again”.

Surrounded by his family and friends, property developer Martin McCaughey,  48, was speaking on the steps of Dundalk courthouse where minutes earlier a jury  returned a not guilty verdict. He had always denied the charge of assaulting  Daniel McCormack causing him harm.
The two-day trial heard McCormack  was given a suspended three-year jail term for the burglary on the McCaughey  family home and  later successfully sued Mr McCaughey for €175,000.
He  had, the court heard, been left with broken legs and was unable to walk  unassisted for months.
After the verdict, Mr McCaughey said it had  been “a long two years for me and me family”.
He said: “I think I  should never have been here in the first place, that’s what I believe anyway.
“Unfortunately, that is the system and they dragged me through the  courts and I’ve got justice at the finish of it.” He said: “I wouldn’t want to  go through this ordeal again to be honest with you,” but added that he had had a  lot of support since the trial began.
The jury took two  hours and 30  minutes to agree on its  verdict.
Earlier in the day the jury had been  told by Judge Gerard Griffin  he was directing them to return a not guilty  verdict on a second charge which had accused McCaughey of endangerment.
In his charge to the jury the judge told them to “leave aside any sympathy or  disgust you may have for anyone in this trial”.
McCaughey, 48, of  Bunvista, Mount Avenue,  denied assault causing harm to Daniel McCormack, aged  27, at Clann Chullainn Park, Farndreg, Dundalk, on June  27,  2008.
Yesterday the jury heard how  McCaughey told gardaí:  “I hit him again in my  car,” and that “I squashed him” between the railings and the car.
Brendan Grehan, defending, told the jury the intention of the accused man had  been to assist the gardaí. He said: “I am not looking for sympathy for Mr  McCaughey,” nor was he asking the jury to be “hostile” to Daniel McCormack. He  said the accused “was not a vigilante” and was not somebody out at night in his  car patrolling for bad people.
Asking the jury to acquit his client,  Mr Grehan said: “I ask you not to support some law of the jungle” but to support  “an ordinary decent citizen” doing something to apprehend somebody who committed  a crime.
Prosecuting counsel Kevin Segrave told the jury that  McCaughey had used his car “as a weapon to assault,” against Daniel McCormack  and had given him “a skilful chase”.

Read more: http://www.irishexaminer.com/news/man-cleared-of-assaulting-burglar-twice-with-his-car-184040.html#ixzz1mXysfYda