What Dateline does not want you to know…

June 29, 2007 by geekydrummer

By Granty Slater
The Associated Press

MURPHY, Texas — A sting in which police teamed up with “Dateline NBC” to catch online pedophiles was supposed to send a flinty-eyed, Texas-style warning about this Dallas suburb: Don’t mess with Murphy. Instead, it has turned into a fiasco.

One of the 25 men caught in the sting — a prosecutor from a neighboring county — committed suicide when police came to arrest him. The Murphy city manager who approved the operation lost his job in the ensuing furor. And the district attorney is refusing to prosecute any of the men, saying many of the cases were tainted by the involvement of amateurs. “Certainly these people should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, but the fact that this was all done for television cameras raises some questions,” said Mayor Bret Baldwin. It is the first time in nine “Dateline NBC: To Catch a Predator” stings across the country in the past year and a half that prosecutors did not pursue charges.  “Dateline” has made prime-time entertainment out of contacting would-be child molesters over the Internet, luring them to a meeting place, and videotaping their humiliating confrontations with reporter Chris Hansen.  “Dateline” works with an activist group called Perverted Justice, which supplies adults who troll Internet chat rooms, posing as underage boys and girls, and try to collect incriminating sex talk.  City manager Craig Sherwood approved such an operation in this well-to-do community of 11,000 after being approached by “Dateline” and Perverted Justice, but he never informed the mayor or the City Council. He said secrecy was necessary for the sting to be effective.

Over four days in November, 24 men were arrested at a two-story home in one of Murphy’s newer neighborhoods after allegedly arranging to meet boys or girls there.
Some other suspects contacted Perverted Justice decoys online but never showed up at the house. Among them was Louis Conradt Jr., an assistant prosecutor from neighboring Kauffman County, who allegedly engaged in a sexually explicit online chat with an adult posing as a 13-year-old boy.  As police knocked at his door and a “Dateline” camera crew waited in the street, Conradt shot himself.  His sister, Patricia Conradt, told the City Council that police acted as “a judge, jury and executioner that was encouraged by an out-of-control reality show.”  Then, last month, Collin County District Attorney John Roach dropped all charges. He said that in 16 of the cases, he had no jurisdiction, since neither the suspects nor the decoys were in the county during the online chats.  As for the rest of the cases, he said neither police nor NBC could guarantee the chat logs were authentic and complete.  “The fact that somebody besides police officers were involved is what makes this case bad,” said Roach, who was informed of the sting in advance but did not participate. “If professionals had been running the show, they would have done a much better job rather than being at the beck and call of outsiders.”

As details of the suicide emerged, Murphy’s mayor, City Council and most of its residents learned for the first time that potential molesters were being luring to their city. Many were furious.  “They can chase predators all they want, but they shouldn’t do it in a populated area with children, two blocks from an elementary school,” said Lisa Watson, 33, who lives down the road from the sting house and has three children and another on the way.

Bryan Whorton, who lives with his wife and baby across the street from the house, said his neighborhood was put in danger. Cars sped up and down the street and police sprinted from hiding spots, guns drawn, to arrest suspects, he said. One suspect dropped a bag of crack, Whorton said.  “This is a family community. It didn’t look kosher at all,” he said.

Two weeks ago, the City Council voted to buy out the city manager’s contract for $255,000.
NBC’s Hansen said Murphy is the only place the show has encountered such resistance.
“I don’t want to get involved in the DA’s business or the police business,” he said. “I can tell you in the other locations, these issues did not come up.”  Eric Nichols, a Texas deputy attorney general, said that when law enforcement authorities pull an Internet sex sting, officers posing as decoys follow strict rules. Detailed chat logs are kept to ensure that “sex talk” is initiated by the potential predator. That way, a defendant cannot claim entrapment.
Eric Chase, a defense attorney specializing in sex crimes, said stings are the job of police, not TV crews. “Police should not be abdicating a very important function to either private organizations or entertainment organizations,” he said.

Last modified: June 29. 2007 12:09AM

Where were you when…

June 28, 2007 by geekydrummer

iphone

Will you remember where you were and what you were doing on June 29, 2007 at 6 p.m.?  Will you be mowing the grass, eating dinner with your family, adding another riveting post on your blog, or will you be standing in line for your iPhone? 

Yes the wait is over, the time has come, the pigs are flying, the campers are already in front of the stores, and apple is releasing their long awaited cell phone.

But will the iPhone live up to its expectations?  I am going to say yes, for most people.  For us techies, the phone may fall short, but for your normal, iPod using public, it could be the most amazing phone ever.  Below is a short list of features, and I sure more features will be known with the phone is actually released.

iPod – The 3.5 inch wide screen will be amazing, much better than the iPod’s small screen.  When you play a video clip, the orientation automatically changes to landscape.  The visual album display will be much more fun to use then the standard list.  I hope Apple will take some of the new iPod technology from the phone, to create actual next-generation iPods.  The downside – no wireless downloads from iTunes. 

Visual Voicemail — I really love this feature.  Now you can view a listing of your voicemail messages and choose the ones you want to listen to, instead of listening to all 25 message to get to the one you really care about.

Wi-Fi — this always makes things better, why use At&T’s, no so hot,  internet connection, when high-speed broadband can be use via wi-fi, at Krystals.  Yumm, I want my double-cheese Krystal and my fantasy football.  Now I am getting hungry.

Battery Life — Talk Time: Up to 8 hours; Standby time: Up to 250 hours; Internet Use: Up to 6 hours; Video playback: Up to 7 hours; Audio playback: Up to 24 hours — That sounds great, but who knows once you start doing these things at the same time how long will the battery really last?

Internet — I do like what I have seen about the Internet on the iPhone.  It looks like the Internet is suppose to look like, not some crappy scaled-down text version.  Al Gore will be so proud.  And what about the streaming YouTube ability?  Who doesn’t love a good YouTube video?

Business Applications – I keep hearing people complain that the iPhone will not be business-friendly like the blackberry, or their pda.  My answer;  Apple is not targeting the business community with the iPhone.  I think their target is going to be the iPod users; moms, college students, high school students, non-technical people.  It will be more for entertainment, then calculating stocks or keeping inventory.

In closing, the iPhone is about to make cell phone history.  It has raised the bar for the simple flip phones.  I hate that the iPhone will only be available with At&t, because I have Verizon, dang Verizon, but maybe the second-generation iPhones will be opened to other networks.  Or maybe Apple will launch an iPod / PDA device, an iPhone without the phone (I would buy that..).

For more info on the iPhone check out Apples website at www.apple.com/iphone/  

The show “Free Stuff” on G4TV will be giving away 6 iPhones on Friday.  Go to www.g4tv.com/freestuff/ for more details.

Don’t play with Razrs in the pool!

June 26, 2007 by geekydrummer

That sounds like a good title for a children’s book…. Unfortunately it is not a book but reality. 

Over the weekend my wife and I decided to take our two children to Aunt P’s pool.  It was a beautiful day, the water was 90 degrees, no crowds to worry about.  When we arrive my wife and daughter immediately jump into the water, leaving me the duty of getting our 1 yr old son changed into his swimming trunks and floaties on. 

I get his swim trunks and swim diaper on (not in that order) and then we move to the floatation devices.  This is were the drama begins, these floaties won’t hold him up, these other ones make him float on his face, the life-jacket makes him float on his back. What if we put the life-jacket AND the floaties on him? (FYI, then he cannot move…there is just no happy medium.)  After I have tried about 5 different combinations, my son looks up at me and said “ALL DAY?”  I assure him that this is not going to take all day, and luckily the #5 combo worked well enough to hold him afloat, somewhat.

Now we are ready to enjoy the water, I make my way down the steps, to the shallow end, grab my son and we are off.  Oh, but wait, I have forgotten something, what could it be.  I stop for a second to ponder, then, Oh Yes, I remember, I reach down and out of my pocket I pull out my small, sleak, Motorola Razr phone. 

I was a little disappointed that I had let the “floatie” issue distract me so, but there was nothing I could do about it now.  I quickly handed my son to my wife, jumped out of the pool, took the phone apart and let it lounge on the pool chair in the warm sun.  Could it still work, if I let it dry out, will it still function.  The answer ………… Not a chance.

Poor phone……

On the bright side, at least I am not on call this week.

Wait, that is my phone...

About the author…

June 25, 2007 by geekydrummer

Well I think I am going to try and give this blog thing a shot.  If nothing comes of it, then what was lost other than a few pecks on the keyboard.  I think my first entry should be about myself, or is this my second entry since WordPress added a “Hello World” post when I signed up?

As the blog name hints, I am some what of a geek, and I am a drummer.  My whole career has been geared towards technology, and I must say, it excites me.  My first job was for a private company who wrote banking software, my duties were product support and installations.  I learned a great deal of networking during this time as I was the first to install client / server networks in some local banks.

My next venture was to the local government level, which I love.  I first was a Information Systems Technician (Snazzy Title), where I focused more on server operating systems and networking.  This is where I got my first taste of fiber optics, which I would not recommend tasting because the line is made of glass and can cut your tongue.  I worked here for about 5 years and then was snatched away by local law enforcement.

I never thought I would have ended up in a law enforcement career, but here I am, making the world a better place, one bad guy at a time.  Contrary to what you may think, I am not working as a patrol officer, rather a Special Investigator.  Yes, I have brought my tech skills to the law enforcement area, and are putting them to good use busting the “hi-tech” criminals.  I also work with the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, which I do feel like I am making a difference.

Well that is as short and sweet as it gets.  After 4 paragraphs, maybe this blogging thing is not going to be as hard as I thought.  Until next time…

Wait a second, are you asleep?………….Hello?…………….WAKE UP!!