Woman says FBI wrongly suspects hacking link By Arik Hesseldahl NEW YORK (Wired) - A woman identified as an enemy of the hackers who attacked The New York Times online site recently says the FBI now considers her a suspect as well. [She is profiting the most from the hacking. Perhaps that gives her motive..] "The FBI has no rational reason to consider me a suspect," said Carolyn Meinel, a New Mexico computer security consultant. Meinel, author of The Happy Hacker and founder of an online community by the same name, held a sparsely attended press conference in New York Wednesday to publicize what she says amounts to harassment by the FBI. Meinel claims that FBI investigators, eager to make an arrest in the high-profile case, are following a trail gone cold. The result, she said, has been a bitter stalemate. She said she would like to cooperate with the Bureau's investigation, but fears that doing so might lead to her wrongful indictment. When told by FBI agents that she was a suspect, Meinel said she was asked to take a lie detector test. She agreed at first, but following the advice of lawyers and friends, Meinel later refused. "I was told that the only reason they ask for a lie detector test is when they want to trip you up and get you to say something they can use to ask for an indictment," she said. Later, Meinel was told she was not a suspect in the case, but that the request to take the lie detector test still stood. FBI Special Agent Doug Beldon said he had no comment on the case, and would not confirm or deny that the attack is under active investigation. Published reports say that the FBI's computer-crimes unit is handling the case. [It is most definitely under investigation.] Meinel was one of several people named in a message posted on The New York Times Web site by Hacking for Girlies in an attack that occurred on Sept. 13. The message appears in the HTML code of the page. Others taunted by the HFG statement included New York Times reporter John Markoff and Tsutomu Shimomura, a computer security expert who assisted the FBI in the arrest of Kevin Mitnick. Markoff and Shimomura co-wrote a controversial book about the Mitnick case, "Takedown." A movie based on the book is under development by Miramax Films. "She is writing a chapter about us in her second book.... Her goal all along has been to lead us on, watch us get busted, then write about us, la Markoff/Mitnick, Shimomura/Mitnick, Quittner/MOD, Stoll/Hess. See a pattern forming here? We sure do," HFG wrote. The group claimed that Meinel asked them "to hit a bigger and more trafficked site," according to the statement. "She told us that she is almost done with the book." A second edition of The Happy Hacker has just appeared, which Meinel made available to reporters. She scoffed at suggestions that her connection to the attack had helped sell more books. ["She told us that she is almost done with the book..." shortly followed by "second edition .. just appeared". Interesting.] "I had the chance to exploit this incident in September and didn't. I've been a lousy publicist for this book," she said. [Getting her name in a NYT article among others isn't exploiting the incident?] When first contacted by Wired News on Sept. 13, the day of the Times attack, Meinel denied any relationship with HFG. "I don't know who they are in real life," she said at the time, denying their claim that she was writing about them. "I hope they come to their senses before they wind up in jail." Meinel said the first she had heard of HFG was Aug. 7, when the group allegedly hacked Route 66, a New Mexico ISP where Meinel holds an account. Whoever cracked the ISP apparently also downloaded a file containing 1,749 credit card numbers. [Yet in another article she claimed to know them long before that, sometime back in April or so.] Details of the attack on the ISP were reported in Forbes magazine last month. The story includes an interview with individuals claiming to be the perpetrators. Having written about the cracker underground in her book and for Scientific American, Meinel is no stranger to their wrath. She detailed a history of telephone and email harassment against her dating back two years. She said she has been kicked off of four ISPs as a result of various hacking attacks against her. Each attack was reported to the FBI, she said, who took reports, but did little. Meinel said she was approached by an FBI agent in 1997 and asked to write a proposal for teaching the bureau about computer criminal tactics. That offer was abruptly rescinded when a teenage associate of Meinel's was raided by the FBI on suspicion of hacking crimes. Meinel said she suspects the boy, called "Foobie" in her book, was framed by her critics in the cracker underground. One former hacker-turned-computer-security consultant-Brian Martin, who goes under various handles, including Mea Culpa and Jericho-has published the details of his complicated ongoing feud with Meinel.