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Global articles on espionage, spying, bugs, and other interesting topics.

Keep abreast of the espionage threats facing your organisation.

Olympic ‘spying’ suspect bailed

 

Baroness Ford

Baroness Ford claimed Spurs had all 14 members of her board monitored by private investigators

A man arrested over claims that London 2012 executives were put under surveillance by a potential tenant of the Olympic Stadium has been bailed.

Tottenham Hotspur FC monitored all 14 board members of the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC), according to the OPLC’s Chair, Baroness Ford.

The Premier League club said it “totally rejects the accusation in the strongest possible terms”.

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Investigators charged in connection with HP spying case

In 2006, HP Chairman Patricia Dunn (bottom left)–with the approval of then CEO Mark Hurd (bottom right)–sent private detectives to spy on board members and reporters from such publications as the Wall Street Journal and CNET

(Credit: Greg Sandoval for CNET/HP)

A father-and-son team of private investigators was charged in federal court last week on charges of conspiracy to commit Social Security fraud in connection with Hewlett-Packard’s 2006 spying scandal, a court representative confirmed today.

The charges filed Thursday against Matthew DePante and his father, Joseph DePante, in U.S. District Court in San Jose, Calif., stem from allegations that HP had indirectly hired their Florida-based private investigation firm, Action Research Group–a subcontractor to another firm–to probe boardroom leaks to journalists, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

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French nuclear giant convicted of spying on Greenpeace

A French court has convicted the French state electricity company, Electricité de France SA (EDF), on charges of spying on Greenpeace France.

The company was fined €1.5 million, and ordered to pay €500,000 in damages to Greenpeace for non-material losses.

EDF was charged with complicity in concealing stolen documents, and complicity with an operation to break into a computer network.

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US Army soldier arrested on suspicion of espionage

Anchorage, Alaska

A U.S. Army specialist from Kentucky who was serving as a military policeman has been arrested at an Alaska military base on suspicion of spying, an Army spokesman said on Tuesday.

Specialist William Colton Millay was taken into custody at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on October 28 following a joint espionage investigation conducted by the FBI and Army Counterintelligence special agents, Army spokesman Lt. Col. Bill Coppernoll said.

Coppernoll did not say who Millay, of Owensboro, Kentucky, was suspected of spying for or what sensitive information he may have had access to. He said the investigation was ongoing.

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US goes public with spying frustrations

In accusing China and Russia of conducting widespread and effective economic espionage against America, the US intelligence establishment on Thursday brought into the public domain what many in government, the private sector and the media have been saying for years.

The 31-page document directly blames the governments of the two rival powers for campaigns to steal American technology, reflecting what analysts said was a deep feeling of frustration at being unable to stop the spying through either diplomatic talks or technological defences.

The incidents mentioned in the report include the attack on Google’s network in 2010, where the company later claimed part of its source code may have been taken, and a 2011 study by McAfee that described an intrusion it called “Night Dragon” which took data from the systems of energy companies and which was traced back to an address in China.

It also lists the cases of three ethnic Chinese employees of American companies who were arrested for stealing proprietary information which they had allegedly planned to sell to new employers in China.

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