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Site Claims to Reveal 'Tattle-tales'

Dekortage writes "Have you ever ratted somebody out? If it was a legal case, you might end up on Who's A Rat, an online database of police informants and undercover agents, identified through various publicly-available documents such as court briefings. The data-mined information is now available online at a price. As reported in the New York Times, 'The site says it has identified 4,300 informers and 400 undercover agents, many of them from documents obtained from court files available on the Internet.' Understandably, U.S. judges and law enforcement agents are upset, although defense lawyers seem to like the idea. Where do you draw the line between legal transparency and secrecy?"

33 of 565 comments (clear)

  1. Who is a rat??? by D-Cypell · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...I am!

    Registrant:
    Sean Bucci
    Sean Bucci
    23 Marshall Street
    North Reading, MA 01864
    US
    Email: SeanB00@aol.com

    Registrar Name....: REGISTER.COM, INC.
    Registrar Whois...: whois.register.com
    Registrar Homepage: www.register.com

    Domain Name: whoisarat.com

    Created on..............: Fri, May 21, 2004
    Expires on..............: Mon, May 21, 2007
    Record last updated on..: Tue, Jan 02, 2007

    Administrative Contact:
    Who''s a Rat
    Anthony Capone
    9 Tanbark Circuit , Suite 1945
    Werrington Downs, NSW2747
    AU
    Phone: (02) 9475-0699
    Email: contact@whosarat.com

    Technical Contact:
    Who''s a Rat
    Anthony Capone
    9 Tanbark Circuit , Suite 1945
    Werrington Downs, NSW2747
    AU
    Phone: (02) 9475-0699
    Email: contact@whosarat.com

    DNS Servers:

    ns32.servershost.net

    1. Re:Who is a rat??? by Oztun · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not only are you a rat (ratting out rats) but it appears you are a drug dealer and tax evader as well...

      http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/ma/Press%20Office%20-%20 Press%20Release%20Files/Feb2007/Bucci-Sean-convict ion.html

    2. Re:Who is a rat??? by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It looks like that North Reading MA address is no longer valid:

      "Among other things, the jury returned a general forfeiture judgment of $2.7 million against BUCCI, and judgments of forfeiture of his house at 23 Marshall Street in North Reading, a 2002 Chevrolet Avalanche SUV, a boat, and $35,000 in a bank account."

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    3. Re:Who is a rat??? by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good for him, drug dealers are the freedom fighters in the War on Drug Users. Anyone taking that kind of risk upon themselves to distribute marijuana to needy people is a hero in my book.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  2. Haven't we seen this before? by Tofystedeth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Didn't some guy write an article something along the lines of "Who's a Government Agent Whose Husband Disagrees With the Policies of the Current Administration?"
    There was a bit of a kerfuffle over that if I recall.

    --
    "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Drink deeply or not at all."
    1. Re:Haven't we seen this before? by mbone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hmm, Richard Armitage

      Aide to (Republican) Senator Bob Dole
      Foreign policy advisor to (Republican) President-elect Ronald Reagan.
      Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for East Asia and Pacific Affairs in the (Republican) Reagan administration.
      Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy in the (Republican) Reagan administration.
      Roving ambassador in the (Republican) first Bush administration.
      Foreign policy advisor to (Republican) George W. Bush in the 2000 campaign.
      Deputy Secretary of State in the (Republican) second Bush administration.

      He clearly has deep roots in the Democratic Party.

    2. Re:Haven't we seen this before? by jahudabudy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just b/c a person does not support Bush and his administration, does not mean that person is a Democrat. Maybe he is a Republican that doesn't like Bush? There are lots of reasons to disapprove of the Bush administration that fall outside of traditional political cheer-leading.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
  3. Where do you draw the line? by geoffrobinson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you risk getting informants or cops murdered in reprisal killings. That seems like a good line to draw.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:Where do you draw the line? by Applekid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What about government maintained lists of sex offenders? Like people on that list for crimes under the umbrella of "sex crimes" don't get death threats pledging to kill that pedophile pervert, even though they might have just been caught peeing in a bush? What about people falsely accused that get their names smeared in public?

      This smacks of the same kind of "we're your lords and masters who dare not be questioned" as this topic does, as does this one.

      IANAL, so now would be a pre-emptively good time for me to ask someone to detail what exactly "entrapment" is and how undercover infiltrators relate to it.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
  4. Re:Undercover Agents? by jimstapleton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They don't care. This is probably from the crowd that things the only thing wrong with comitting a crime is getting caught.

    That being said, they need to put the creators/curators on the list - aren't they rats themselves now?

    --
    34486853790
    Connection too slow for X forwarding? Try "ssh -CX user@host"
  5. Re:Undercover Agents? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If this site does in fact gather all its information from documents that are in the public domain (as it claims), then there's not much in the way of recourse.

    I wonder if soon we'll see a prohibition on this sort of data mining...making it a crime, or at least a regulated activity, to collate publically available data into a more usable form. I don't see how such a law could be enforced, however, since data-mining technology is already available to practically everyone. Perhaps we'll see restrictions on data-mining technology we currently see on encryption algorithms.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

  6. Re:Undercover Agents? by thesolo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I mean do they not see the dangers in doing this? Or do they just not care?
    Based upon the fact that the person who started the site is awaiting trial for drug charges, I'm guessing the latter.

    Sean Bucci, a former Boston-area disc jockey, set up WhosaRat.com after federal prosecutors charged him with selling marijuana in bulk from his house. Bucci is under house arrest awaiting trial.
  7. Who is this going to help? by Luke+Dawson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What exactly is the whole premise behind this idea, if not to protect those who do wrong from being called out or caught? Isn't the whole point of being a whistleblower or informant that you can either help put bad guys behind bars or expose a corporate scandal or safety breach without fear of reprisal, because your identity is kept secret? Or am I completely missing the point here? It just seems to be that the whole point of this website is to give bad guys the ability to track down and "punish" those who actually help the authorities curtail their wrongdoings.

  8. What goes around comes around by SourceVisigoth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If judges and prosecutors are going to use people's MySpace, Facebook, and Google search results against them and claim, "Hey, it's a public record!" then they shouldn't be surprised or outraged by this. The whole trend of using publicly available online data to snoop on people is a two way street.

  9. Pretty interesting. by Mockylock · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I went to West Virginia University, and the other large University in the state was Marshall.

    When anyone would get busted in Marshall for any reason, they were given 2 choices.

    A. Go to Jail and pay the consequences.
    B. Go to WVU to school and continue your education on US, while working undercover.

    You would be surprised at how many times this happens. It also happened with people I knew (or thought I knew) when they were busted at WVU and sent to MU for "REHAB".

    Nonetheless, it's funny they're doing this, simply because if someone's a supposed "rat" and they're found out... you're more than likely not messing with the scene anymore. If you're honestly doing anything that has risk, your best bet is to just not meet new people and don't deal with people that wouldn't go down for you.

    In other words, you're going to get caught if you're stupid or deal with stupid people. When messing with drugs, you're usually messing with fucked up people. If you stay in long enough, those fucked-up people are going to get you caught.

    My suggestion is, if you MUST, just do drugs, don't sell them.

    ;)

    --
    "Please, shut up. Just when I think you can't say anything more stupid, you speak again." -Archie Bunker.
  10. Public information... by TheBigBezona · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If they are using public records to compile the list, then how "secret" is the information expected to be?

  11. reminds me of "stop snitching" by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    in east coast cities like baltimore and philadephia, street violence continues unabated, and police have a problem getting witnesses to cooperate in shooting death investigations due to t-shirts, songs, and the like that demonize cooperating with the police

    but of course, you will hear the regular cacophony of folks here on slashdot who can only think of subjects like this in a vacuum, outside of real world effects, and support "who's a rat", just because it's vaguely antigovernment

    as if the government is the source of all of our problems in the world. as if the police are only the brutal shock troops of tyranny

    gee, i dunno, maye sometimes law enforcement is there to fight simple straightforward crime and protect us and we should help them do that?

    i know, wacky reactionary ultraconservative fascist and authoritarian of me to say that, huh?

    pffft

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  12. Re:Not fair game. by Computer! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "This definitely seems like attack on law and order - when properly authorized and overseen, undercover investigations are one of the few legitimate means of acting to prevent crime in a way that can be ethically and logically defensible for a state."

    Bullshit. Informants are often criminals themselves and are paid for their information. Undercover policework walks a very thin line to keep from crossing over into entrapment. Not to mention, almost all of the "wrongdoing" that this network of lies is trying to stop is victimless drug crime.

    --
    If you fall off a building, go real limp, because maybe you'll look like a dummy and people will be like hey, free dummy
  13. Re:Sure, why not by Applekid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the police really wanted to turn those "No Snitch" movements around, they should go back to doing what they have written on their cars: To Protect and Serve.

    As opposed to racial profiling. As opposed to beating suspects mercilessly when they present no danger to the officer. As opposed to taking their sweet time to respond to inner-city disturbances while rushing to rich neighborhoods. As opposed to villifying teenagers that are just bored and want to hang out in a public place and not causing any trouble. As opposed to the "we are above the law" attitude that many many officers seem to have.

    I remember getting pulled over by an undercover detective for looking at him wrong. Quite literally. He parked his unmarked vehicle with illegally dark tints across two handicapped spaces at my local bank branch and some old lady had to park considerably farther. As I left the ATM I saw him getting into his vehicle and I saw this poor thing with the appropriate handicapped tag in no more complicated than a nightgown struggling with her walker.

    I stared at him nastily. I wanted him to feel the shame that others were judging him. Obviously I rubbed him the wrong way since I drove off maybe three blocks before this guy turned on ol' red and blues mounted on his dashboard. I was pulled over and given a lecture about how HE was keeping me safe.

    Pro tip: in those situations, the only thing you should do is "Yes, officer" lest you get tazered.

    Hell, I live in South Florida... NBC did a story on filing complaints to police stations. Most of the stations just wanted a verbal report and wouldn't provide him with the anonymous forms required under law. To top it all off, when the report got on the air, the investigator had a BOLO notice posted! "Fuck da police" isn't just because we're rebellious: it's because so many DO WRONG.

    Questioning witnesses for murders is movie-time. Law and Order on CBS time. It happens, but it's not so prevalent that doors are being knocked on day in and out to find out where they were on August the 11th at 3:19am.

    If the police stopped intentionally being antagonists to the citizenry maybe we'd cooperate more.

    --
    More Twoson than Cupertino
  14. He's missing half the business model... by dbc · · Score: 5, Funny

    He only charges a fee to read the list. He's missing half the market.

    He should also charge to *not* publish a name on the list. *sheesh* some people just don't know how to write a business plan.

    1. Re:He's missing half the business model... by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Funny

      He only charges a fee to read the list. He's missing half the market.

      He should also charge to *not* publish a name on the list.

      Stop being so "Web 1.0". He should make money from hitmen's banner ads.

  15. Re:They deserve to be outed by hesiod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So because you know some people who went overboard, everyone is automatically a victim.

    "Victimless crime" is usually meant to exclude the person committing the crime.

    Even if you don't buy that, "drugs" isn't a crime. "Drug Possession" is a crime, and IS victimless. Now, people who use the drugs may have made themselves victims. That is something else, though.

  16. Re:Undercover Agents? by MBGMorden · · Score: 4, Informative

    Also, one of the MAJOR purchasers of data mining services: law enforcement. I work for the IT staff at a local county government (which includes the Sheriff's department naturally). They have a subscription to a service (it's run by the same company that does LexisNexis) that lets them look up ALL KINDS of information on people. You want a Blue . . . maybe Grey SUV registered within 50 miles of a crime scene that has a 5 and either an I or 1 in the license number? Yeah, it'll pull that up for you. You want a GIS driven map showing every sex offender within a certain radius of a coordinate, complete the mug shots and everything? It'll do that. You want to find every person remotely connected to a suspect? As a demonstration the sales guy plugged in a random person from our office and it brought up a list a list that included a college roommate of his wife from 20+ years ago. All of it was sorted by "closeness" and it was a long ways from him, but it found it.

    ALL of this information was data mined from public record. Basically, everything you could want to know about someone or something they had, and it was for sale. Only restriction is that they blank out the SSN of people if you're not law enforcement (we had to give specific IP's of the machines using the service so that they could ID us and open that up too).

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  17. Re:They deserve to be outed by Jaysyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Selling marijuana to consenting adults is the very definition of a victimless crime. It's the government's own fault for not legalizing it & collecting taxes.

    --
    There is a war going on for your mind.
  18. Reprisal killings are extremely rare by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Informative

    When you risk getting informants or cops murdered in reprisal killings. That seems like a good line to draw.

    Reprisal killings are this big scary monster that is blown way out of proportion. About 50 officers a year are murdered, and in '04, there were ~850,000 officers in the US. That's a homicide victim rate of 0.00058%. Guess what it is nation-wide? 0.0056%. You read that correctly. Police officers have a homicide victim rate that is one tenth that of the general population despite working a job we'd assume puts them at more danger of being murdered. The #1 cause of death for police? Traffic collisions, overwhelmingly. Don't believe me? Go check out the DoJ and FBI statistics; they spend a lot of effort compiling these stats.

    On the flip side, "snitches" are a huge problem, as are "expert" witnesses. If you want to be scared out of your mind, read John Grisham's The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town, ISBN 0385517238. A hick prosecutor and police department, with plenty of help from a state crime lab "expert", put SEVERAL men on DEATH ROW despite massive flaws in the evidence and witnesses against them and horrendously flawed trials.

    1. Re:Reprisal killings are extremely rare by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you want to be scared out of your mind, read John Grisham's The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town, ISBN 0385517238. Which, for the record is non-fiction, despite Grisham's widespread fame and sucess as a writer of pop fiction.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  19. Re:They deserve to be outed by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Criminal neglect is a separate issue from drug use. Neglect can be the result of legal or illegal drug use (including alcohol use), or it can be the result of other mental problems. We can pursue and prosecute criminal neglect on its own merits, distinct from the question of drug use. We take this approach with alcohol as it is.

  20. Re:They deserve to be outed by UncleFluffy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, when parents don't feed their children because they need drug money, its a victimless crime, no one other than the parent is hurt!

    No, it's child abuse, just the same as if they spent the children's money on a trip to Vegas. That doesn't mean that staying in a luxury hotel or selling someone an airline ticket is or should be a crime.

    When people cant think properly because they've taken too many drugs

    No, it's criminal negligence, just the same as if they put on a blindfold and got into their car. That doesn't mean that owning opaque pieces of cloth should be a crime.

    People dealing drugs to others, even when the others haven't been shown how dangerous the drugs are, is a victimless crime. The people who recieved the drugs certainly weren't hurt!

    If you choose to consent to something, you aren't a victim of it. Now, there might be a small minority that were addicted by someone else, in which case they are victims, but most people who use drugs choose to do so.

    (And so on for the other examples)

    Honestly, I could care less about the people who know the risks, and still use the drugs to the point of harming themselves. It's those that use them and harm others in the process, that bother me.

    The vast majority of drug users don't harm others. For the minority that do, harming others is already a crime, so punish them for that.

    --

    What would Lemmy do?

  21. Re:They deserve to be outed by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, when parents don't feed their children because they need drug money, its a victimless crime, no one other than the parent is hurt!

    Dude, that's not drug use, that's abuse.

    When people cant think properly because they've taken too many drugs, or can't afford what they a mentally or physically dependant on, and rob/kill others for drug money, its a victimless crime.

    Again, that's not drug use, that's robbery.

    People dealing drugs to others, even when the others haven't been shown how dangerous the drugs are, is a victimless crime. The people who recieved the drugs certainly weren't hurt!

    It's a consensual transaction.

    Listen, I smoke pot every day. I have a job. I pay my bills. I did well in college. I have a nice home. I'm friendly with the neighbors. I'm good with kids. I love my family. Who is the victim here? If you believe I should go to jail for this, you're a far more dangerous man than I will ever be.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  22. Well, that is the point... by Belial6 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, that is the point of the sex offender lists. Whether you agree with them or not, it is plainly obvious that the lists were designed to help generate vigilante behavior.

  23. Re:They deserve to be outed by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Aside from alcohol (which is --surprise!-- a drug), how many of the non-drug-related crimes were aggravated/incited by a deep unquenchable chemical-induced craving and a non-stop desire to obtain the chemicals in question?

    I think that's what most folks arguing this tend to miss. Sure, people can be cold sober and still commit crime - usually as the result of mental retardation, ignorance, stupidity, or an over-sized ego. OTOH, when an otherwise normal brain is soaked in a narcotic, burns through it, and suddenly that brain cries out for more? All bets are off.

    Thanks to the dumbasses who want to out the "rats" so bad, good luck finding out (much less prosecuting) anyone who commits a crime against you or your property in the future. Folks aren't going to be so eager to be a witness on your behalf if the odds are good that the perpetrator looked like some sort of psycho or gangster type, and potential witnesses stood a solid chance of facing bad mojo for the simple act of telling the truth in a court of law.

    Feel safer now?

    /P

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  24. Re:They deserve to be outed by cduffy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Denying that drug use is a victimless crime is astonishingly ignorant... of the definition of "victimless crime".

    Drug abuse does increase the likelihood of other crimes which do have victims, but drug use in and of itself is indeed victimless. (Hint: If you're consensually engaging in behavior which harms you, you're not a victim. Stupid, yes. A victim, no).

  25. Re:They deserve to be outed by Phisbut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, when parents don't feed their children because they need drug money, its a victimless crime, no one other than the parent is hurt!

    Child neglect is already a crime.

    When people cant think properly because they've taken too many drugs, or can't afford what they a mentally or physically dependant on, and rob/kill others for drug money, its a victimless crime. The people robbed/killed certainly weren't hurt.

    Robbery and murder are already crimes.

    Why shouldn't we try to actually prevent crime every now and then? How about, if you take the drug out of the equation? Parents don't need drug money, so they can feed the children. Child neglect prevented. Or someone didn't become physically dependant on some drug, and doesn't rob/kill anyone to get the money.

    And before you go all "future-crime" paranoid, please be aware that there are such things as victimless crimes which are real crimes, because it will lead to someone being hurt. Drunk driving is such a crime. How would you feel if some jerk drank two whole kegs of beer and hit the road, and the police couldn't arrest him because he hasn't hurt anybody yet? Do you really think we need to wait until the guy kills a whole family with his reckless driving before we stop him? Until he hit someone, there's no victim, yet I do believe it is a crime.

    Or how about someone walks into a bar with a pocket full of date rape drugs? Possession is not a crime, there are no victims, so nobody can arrest him. Let's wait until the guy rapes a couple of women before we can start an investigation after which we're not even sure we'll find anybody guilty because the woman can't even testify.

    Walking into a bar with date rape drugs in your pocket is a victimless crime and should remain a crime, because it is very likely somebody will get hurt eventually. Driving drunk is a victimless crime and should remain a crime because it is also very likely that somebody will get hurt.

    --
    After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
    - The Tao of Programming