Attorney Representing Whistleblowing Cops Claims Police Department Dropped Spyware On His Hard Drive

from the RAT.EXE dept

This news is infuriating if true. And its chance of being true are pretty high, considering how little cops having the whistle blown on them care for those blowing the whistle. In this case, police officials didn't just stonewall a court order to produce records. They also allegedly dropped backdoors and keyloggers onto the plaintiff's hard drive.

An Arkansas lawyer representing current and former police officers in a contentious whistle-blower lawsuit is crying foul after finding three distinct pieces of malware on an external hard drive supplied by police department officials.

In a subfolder titled D:\Bales Court Order, a computer security consultant for Campbell allegedly found three well-known trojans, including:



Win32:Zbot-AVH[Trj], a password logger and backdoor

NSIS:Downloader-CC[Trj], a program that connects to attacker-controlled servers and downloads and installs additional programs, and

Two instances of Win32Cycbot-NF[Trj], a backdoor

Last September, Arkansas State Police officials declined Campbell's request that the agency's criminal investigation division probe how the hard drive sent to Campbell came to be booby-trapped. "The allegations submitted for review appear to be limited to misdemeanor violations which do not rise to a threshold for assigning a case to the CID Special Investigations Unit," the commander of the CID wrote in a September 29 letter declining the request.

Defendants have failed to properly answer discovery requests in compliance with this Court's Order, to wit:



a. Defendants have engaged in intentional spoliation of evidence by deleting entire email accounts without allowing Plaintiffs to search the emails;



b. Defendants have engaged in ongoing, intentional spoliation of evidence by failing to preserve and provide deleted emails that, by their own admissions, were recoverable;



c. Defendants have relied upon past AFOIA responses in answering Plaintiffs' discovery requests, resulting in Defendants providing emails that have improper redactions; and



d. Defendants have failed to provide usable documents related to Capt. Alan Haney's computer, inasmuch as the external hard drive supplied to Plaintiffs contained malicious software designed to hack into Plaintiffs' counsel's computer, rendering the hard drive unsafe for Plaintiffs' use.

After receiving Defendants' responses to Plaintiffs' requests, Plaintiffs reviewed the produced documents and noted that few, if any, emails from most of the Defendants had been produced, aside from what had been previously produced in response to AFOIA requests. Accordingly, Plaintiffs' counsel arranged with Defendants' counsel to meet at the FSPD with Mr. Matlock, and that meeting was scheduled for August 5, 2014.



[...]



As this Court may recall, Defendants cancelled this scheduled meeting on August 1, 2014, via email to Plaintiffs' counsel. Plaintiffs' counsel contacted this Court on August 4, 2014, in an effort to have the August 5 meeting date honored. Defendants' counsel responded on that same date, contending that there was nothing untoward or suspicious about the last-minute rescheduling and that Court intervention into the matter was not needed.

The meeting between Plaintiffs, Defendants, and Mr. Matlock was rescheduled for August 28, 2014. On August 5, 2014, however, Maj. Chris Boyd, Sr., retired from the FSPD. On August 28, when Plaintiffs' counsel asked Mr. Matlock to pull up Maj. Boyd's email account, Defendant Jarrard Copeland immediately asked Mr. Matlock whether Boyd still had an email account, to which Mr. Matlock replied that he did not. Mr. Matlock further informed Plaintiffs' counsel that the emails had been deleted. When pressed on this issue, Mr. Matlock confirmed that they were deleted after Maj. Boyd's retirement on August 5, 2014.

That this was intentional spoliation is bolstered by the fact that, as late as 6:10 PM on August 4, 2014, Mr. Matlock was planning on being at the SPD 'by lunch' on August 5, 2015, and was communicating with other officers about doing specific tasks on the afternoon of August 5…



It was not until 9:06 AM on August 5, 2014 - the date originally scheduled for the meeting and four days after Defendants had cancelled the meeting that Mr. Matlock informed anyone that he was taking that entire day off as a 'discretionary day.' And it was not until on or about August 19, 2014, when Plaintiffs' counsel requested Mr. Matlock's payroll record for the period covering August 5, that the SPD Payroll Department was actually informed that Mr. Matlock had taken a discretionary day two weeks prior. Interestingly, this is the only discretionary day that Mr. Matlock has taken in the last three-plus years.

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In response to a discovery request, the Fort Smith Police Department was ordered to turn over numerous items, including Word documents, PDFs and emails. Attorney Matt Campbell provided an external hard drive to the PD. When it was returned to him, it containedof what he requested, along with three pieces of software he definitelyrequest.The police department claims it has no idea how these ended up on Campbell's hard drive. It maintains its innocence despite acknowledging its computers have anti-virus software installed that should have prevented these from ending up on its drives, much less being copied to an external drive. Campbell isn't buying these proclamations. In an affidavit submitted to the court, he alleges the PD added these trojans to take control of his computer and intercept his passwords and communications.Campbell's first attempt to have this apparent breach investigated went nowhere.So, even though CID stands for "Criminal Investigation Division" and a misdemeanor is, in fact, a criminal offense, the Arkansas State Police decided that it couldn't be bothered to examine an incident that could have resulted in breaches of attorney-client privilege. "Don't bother us until it's a felony, " is the message being sent here. Even if the CID had no interest in dealing with small-time (but not really, considering the implications) misdemeanors, it could have at least referred Campbell to authorities whobe interested in pursuing this. But it didn't -- which either means it had no interest inpursuing this further orno other entity would be interested in pursuing an investigation of the Ft. Smith PD.Perhaps the latter is more likely. Campbell took his complaint to the district's prosecuting attorney and met similar non-results. The district attorney's office claimed it didn't have the resources to pursue this, suggesting that its limited resources will only be used to investigate thoseof the law enforcement sphere.So, Campbell has asked the judge to hold the department in contempt of court and impose sanctions. Not only did the PD apparently drop malware on Campbell's drive, but it also skirted many of the discovery order's stipulations.The affidavit goes into greater detail on all of these accusations. One of the most egregious abuses alleged is the apparently intentional deletion of the entire content of a PD official's email account.Except theresomething suspicious about this last-minute rescheduling.On top of that, Mr. Matlock was still telling other cops he would to be in town during the day he told the plaintiffs he wouldn't be available (August 5), according to emails obtained by Campbell. Then, suddenly, he wasunavailable.Given the amount of obstruction and non-compliance alleged in this affidavit, it's really not that surprising that someone -- with or without approval from superiors -- loaded tainted software onto Campbell's hard drive. Sure, there's a case to be made for stupidity rather than malice, but with the other obfuscation detailed in Campbell's affidavit, the scale is definitely leaning towards the latter.Hopefully, the court will examine these accusations closely, considering no other entity thathold the PD responsible for its alleged misconduct seems willing to move forward with an investigation.

Filed Under: fort smith police department, law enforcement, police, spyware, surveillance, whistleblowers