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How a Hacker Intercepted FBI and Secret Service Calls With Google Maps

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How a Hacker Intercepted FBI and Secret Service Calls With Google Maps

Earlier this week, Bryan Seely, a network engineer and one-time Marine, played me recordings of two phone calls (embedded below.) The calls were placed by unwitting citizens to the FBI office in San Francisco and to the Secret Service in Washington, D.C. Neither the callers nor the FBI or Secret Service personnel who answered the phone realized that Seely was secretly recording them. He used Google Maps to do it.

Yesterday, Gizmodo reported on how easy it was for Seely to spam Google Maps with fake listings. Seely has revealed to Valleywag a more troubling way to exploit the Google's laissez-faire attitude toward verification—loopholes the international search megalith has known about for at least four years.

The callers that Seely recorded thought they were speaking directly to the government agencies because they looked up the telephone number on Google Maps. What they didn't know was that Seely had set up fake listings for the San Francisco FBI office and Secret Service in Washington, D.C., displaying numbers that went to a phone account he set up rather than the federal offices. After Seely's numbers received the calls, they were seamlessly forwarded to the real offices the callers were trying to reach, only now the audio of their conversations with real federal agents was being captured by Seely.

Seely told Valleywag:

Who is gonna think twice about what Google publishes on their maps? Everyone trusts Google implicitly and it's completely unwarranted and it's completely unsafe. I could make a duplicate of the White House and take every inbound phone call from the White House. I could do it for every Senator, every Congressman, every mayor, every governor—every Democratic, every Republican candidate. Every office.

Seely, who has worked for tech companies like Microsoft and Avanade, used to get paid to spam Google Maps. He claims that he faked the government listings, picking numbers with his own 425 area code so they would stand out, because Google ignored his pleas to fix long-standing flaws in the system. Seely said he wasn't taken seriously until yesterday afternoon, when he walked into the Secret Service office near his home in Seattle. While he was there, Seely says he got a notification on his phone that a call had just been intercepted: It was a Washington, D.C., police officer calling the Secret Service about an active investigation.

After that, Seely says, he got patted down, read his Miranda rights, and put in an interrogation room. Email correspondence with the Secret Service indicates that the special agent in charge called him a "hero" for bringing this major security flaw to light. They let him go after a few hours.

Seely says the fake federal listings, which were both ranked second every time I checked Google Maps, were up for four days. He took them down himself when the Secret Service asked. (I took the screenshots above early Wednesday morning.) He picked that particular FBI office because, he says, he had recently watched The Rock, in which Nicolas Cage's character worked for the FBI in San Francisco.

Google told me they were looking into the matter; I will update the post if I hear back. Google told Gizmodo yesterday that it had already made some patches . The FBI has not yet responded to calls or emails. Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary gave Valleywag the following statement:

The incident in question involves an individual posting their own phone number as a Secret Service field office phone number on Google Maps. When unsuspecting citizens utilize this incorrect third party phone number to contact the Secret Service the call is directed through the third party system and recorded. This is not a vulnerability or compromise of our phone system. Virtually any phone number that appears on a crowdsourcing platform could be manipulated in this way.

This incident will be investigated thoroughly and appropriately. The Secret Service encourages the general public to visit our website at www.secretservice.gov to obtain accurate contact information for our field offices.

The audio recordings posted below are relatively innocuous. A man calls the FBI to ask about a phishing email that says he won the lottery; a woman calls the Secret Service to ask for the mailing address of the inspector general. But the implications are chilling. Said Seely:

This is what I do when I'm bored. I just uncovered a national security issue while I was at McDonald's. My internet at the house just got installed [last Saturday] so all these hacks and everything I figured out, was on wifi at McDonald's while my 5-year-old was playing with other little kids.

Shaking your head at Google's "evil" ways has become about as perfunctory as using Google products. But that apathy comes with a price. For a $400 billion behemoth, it's as easy to turn a blind eye to long-running international map scams as it easy to bury your competitor's (better) product .

Like most geeks who know how to game a system, Seely suffers from a smidge of megalomania. This all could have been avoided, he taunts, if Google made closing its loopholes a priority—or given him a job. Instead, he was forced to get creative, flaunting fake listings. He started a Twitter account called Maptivists and posted some of the goofier exploits.

How a Hacker Intercepted FBI and Secret Service Calls With Google Maps

How a Hacker Intercepted FBI and Secret Service Calls With Google Maps

That got Seely on the evening news in Seattle and the attention of experts in maps, local search, and SEO, as well a call with Dan Pritchett, a director of engineering at Google. The corporation reached out through Mike Blumenthal, a prominent maps blogger, who said Google wanted to talk, but first Seely had to cut out the pranks. Pritchett then only agreed to talk if the call was never mentioned. When they spoke, Seely said, Prichett was concerned:

But he's treating me like shit during the entire phone call and I had sent them an email two months prior telling them how to fix this stuff and I was tired of seeing all the spam... So I then started thinking [Monday night] because I was really kind of mad at the guys from Google and I was trying to figure out alright what can I do to show them that this isn't just a spam problem...

Rather than work with Seely and ask him how he did it, Google just tried to "reverse engineer the ones I left out in the open for them," he said. But the government listings were different:

I made these ones carefully, I made these ones special. I have a feeling I know how they search, with their own backend tools, I have a feeling I know how they're searching for spam and how to get around it, because they didn't catch these.

To build his sham government locations, Seely started with Google's Map Maker tool (for roads and such) and then switched to Google Places, which is purely for businesses and just updated its "quality guidelines," to tweak the listings in the final stage. He began with a brand new IP addresses and new Gmail accounts. Then, Google gives you two options, Seely explained:

...type in this code and you can get verified to prove you're human so that it doesn't look like an automated machine. I just opt out of that and go directly to phone verification because the way that these people build these computer systems is assuming that no one wants to do more work—assuming everyone wants the easy way out. So if you choose the easy way then we don't trust you, if you choose the harder way and verify by phone immediately, 'Oh you must be a person and you must be legit.'

As one expert told Komo News, which first picked up Seely's pranks: "It's definitely not a hack, it's not a vulnerability, it's a flaw in how the logic is set up."

Seely used a software called Dynamic Interactive to generate the phone numbers and record the calls. He got fed up with Google after a few weeks, but others have been trying to pressure the company about this issue for years. Dan Austin, who does some consulting for Blumenthal, told Valleywag:

What Bryan is also talking about is that some categories are considered 'benign', like Parking Lot, or Federal Government Office. Some categories are heavily spammed, like Locksmith and Key Duplication Service. So some will trigger postcard and/or manual verification, and some will get phone verification and/or automatic approval. A good spammer, through trial and error, knows which gets flagged and which doesn't.

Google is going to say, 'This is a minor problem. We didn't know about this.' But it's complete bullshit.

Austin should know. In 2012, at the request of Google, he began consulting with Mark Ewing, a product manager at Google for local data quality and James Therrien, who works with the Google Geo community since 2012, based on email correspondence he shared with Valleywag.

Why not fix the problem? Austin says there's a cottage industry around flooding Google Maps with fake listings for businesses like locksmiths, the most notoriously abused sector, and then forwarding the calls from unsuspecting Google users to call centers. The centers either dispatch workers who only accept cash and charge more or, in some cases, they sell the leads back to the actual local businesses being squeezed out. "They make way too much money on AdWords to give a shit about small businesses," said Seely, noting one spammer who made $10 million a year.

To contact the author of this post, please email nitasha@gawker.com.


Second Amendment Man Shoots Defenseless Chipotle Restaurant, Goes Free

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Leave the gun. Take the burrito. No, I said leave the gun, not drop i—oh, Jesus, what did you do?

A Utah man buying lunch at a Chipotle counter Wednesday had a hilariously klutzy moment Wednesday when he hilariously dropped a bag containing his handgun and it hilariously discharged, firing a slug of hot metal that hilariously missed the other humans who had gathered there to eat and not be shot at. Haw haw haw!

Via Utah-4 TV:

Sandy Police say the man removed his backpack to pay for his meal and accidentally dropped it.

When the bag hit the floor, the handgun he had inside accidentally discharged.

A woman who was eating lunch with her family just a few feet away spoke to ABC 4 Utah about what she saw, "We we're all just eating lunch. I was there with my family and suddenly there was a loud bank and everybody stopped and froze because it was obvious that it was louder than a balloon or dishes crashing…A gun went off."

Luckily the bullet hit the floor and lodged into the concrete.

"What's scary about it is the gun hit the floor and went off," said the woman. "But had the gun hit another way could have shot anyone in the restaurant, my family included."

The man with the gun reportedly picked up the backpack and the shell casing, got his lunch and then waited outside for police.

The man holds a concealed weapons permit in Utah, which is easier to get than temple garments—or, evidently, a Chipotle burrito.

The concrete Chipotle floor died just shy of its fifth birthday.

Despite the fact that it's really, really, really hard to get a safe weapon to fire by dropping it, cops say the man will face no charges, because the discharge was "accidental."

That did not please the woman interviewed by Utah 4, but the law is the law, says Sandy, Utah, police Sgt. Jon Arnold. "This wasn't due to him actually handling the gun when it discharged. Those are things... you look at it in terms of criminal negligence, criminal recklessness, in terms of how he was handling the gun," he said.

Arnold added: "He legally has a right to carry his gun that way," which is the most zen thing a cop has ever said, because how the hell is dropping a gun carrying a gun? Meditate on that koan, you godless hippie gun-grabbers.

Uber Is Spamming Seattle with Unwanted Phone Calls

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Uber Is Spamming Seattle with Unwanted Phone Calls

Pending legislation could hamper Uber's ability to do business in Seattle. Rather than use some of its hundreds of millions of dollars to buy influence like every other company, the transit startup is trying to rally support in the most annoying way possible.

No, not getting Macklemore to pretend to care—robocalls. Tweets are streaming out of Seattle reporting the calls, one of which can be replayed below. But what's even more obnoxious is the story of Colin Bayer, who says he got a call from Uber's Seattle general manager right after he posted the following:

Bayer told me his cell phone number is "publicly posted on my Facebook, which has the same username as my Twitter."

I asked Uber for comment on the astroturf campaign, and haven't heard back. Meanwhile, this could end up doing more to jeopardize the Seattle market than any legislation.

Great-Grandfather Takes the Wrong Kid Home From School

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Great-Grandfather Takes the Wrong Kid Home From School

In what sounds like the start of either a charming Disney movie or a terrifying psychological horror story, a five-year-old Connecticut boy went on a bit of a detour when someone else's great-grandfather picked him up from school.

The 79-year-old was filling in for his granddaughter when he went to pick the kindergartener at the Sterling Community school in Connecticut. His kid and the five-year-old child he picked up were apparently of similar builds, wearing similar hats, and coincidentally lived on the same street.

"[The great-grandfather] said 'I know you live on Pine Hill Road but your mom is sick so you have to come to my house,'" the boy's father, Derek Stone, 38, told The Post.

When the child refused to get out of the car, the man's wife came out to investigate.

"So the man goes into the house and gets his wife, who took my son's hat off, and said 'Hey you have the wrong kid,' then they called the school."

Stone's parents are furious because the school elected to handle the mixup internally rather than calling police. School officials apparently had the great-grandfather drive Stone back to the school, then transported him to the correct home on an empty school bus.

[image via Shutterstock]

Here's What It's Like to Get Locked Inside a Canadian Department Store

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Here's What It's Like to Get Locked Inside a Canadian Department Store

Last night, a Canadian woman shopping for sheets sets realized she might have to sleep in them when the mall closed for the night, locking her inside. Instead of taking advantage of having an entire department store to herself, she took a slightly more civilized route — Twitter.

Seth Rogen's Speech Was Delivered to a Near-Empty Senate Chamber

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Seth Rogen's Speech Was Delivered to a Near-Empty Senate Chamber

Yesterday Seth Rogen testified before a Senate subcommittee to raise awareness for Alzheimer's. Today, he's trying to expose the theatrics of the whole endeavor: although elected officials filled the room to network and get a photo with the actor, only two senators stuck around to actually hear what he had to say.

Rogen's personal, often-poignant seven-minute speech before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health & Human Services was intended to draw attention to the lack of funding for scientific research on the disease.

Celebrity testimony — often derided as inexpert opinion (the House said no thanks to Ben Affleck yesterday due to a "wide offering of other experts available") — is still an extremely effective method for drawing attention to pet issues.

But Rogen's complaint has been that the elected officials who stopped by the hearing yesterday were interested only in his celebrity, and nothing else.

Rogen specifically called out Senator Mark Kirk — who sits on the subcommittee and tweeted a photo with Rogen — for skipping the hearing.

[image via Twitter]

Talking and texting are still illegal, but a California court of appeals ruled today that it's perfe

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Talking and texting are still illegal, but a California court of appeals ruled today that it's perfectly ok to use a cell phone while driving if you use it as a map. The court reasoned that because cell phones could only text and call when the handheld laws were enacted in 2006, only those functions are banned.

Massive International Luxury Carjacking Ring Busted in New Jersey

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Massive International Luxury Carjacking Ring Busted in New Jersey

Dozens of people were arrested today for operating an international crime ring that stole luxury SUVs in New York and New Jersey, many in carjackings, then resold them in West Africa.

Of the 160 cars recovered during the 10-month "Operation Jacked" investigation, at least 27 were forcibly stolen during carjackings.

The operation allegedly trafficked mainly in luxury SUVs - particularly those made by Land Rover, BMW and Mercedes Benz - that were stolen and then taken to underground garages or other locations to "cool off" so members of the ring could determine whether they contained tracking devices. "Wheel men" would then move the vehicles to different locations while deals were made with people acting as fences who would pay $4,000 to $8,000 apiece.

Other members of the group would then arrange for the cars to be shipped out of New York and New Jersey ports to African countries where the cars were outfitted with fake documents and resold for as much as $100,000 per vehicle.

Carjackers and thieves, who worked in "theft crews," were typically paid $4,000 to $8,000 for a stolen car by street-level fences, who sold cars up the chain to higher-level fences. Shippers loaded the cars into shipping containers, which were taken to ports for transport by ship to West Africa, according to Hoffman.

Earlier today, 29 people were charged for their various roles in the ring. They're facing various charges ranging from first-degree racketeering to first-degree carjacking.

New Jersey has been having a problem with high-profile carjackings this year — a man was fatally shot in a Short Hills mall parking garage during a struggle for his Range Rover in December, and thieves nearly made off with a 15-year-old girl when her mom briefly left her in a running car in Newark.

[image via ABC 7]


Gunmen Seize Crimea's Airports, Ukraine Warns of Russian "Occupation"

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Gunmen Seize Crimea's Airports, Ukraine Warns of Russian "Occupation"

Friday morning, dozens of armed men in military uniforms without insignias surrounded two Crimean airports in what Ukraine's Interior Minister Arsen Avakov has declared an "invasion and occupation" by Russian forces. The incident comes one day after masked gunmen, believed to be pro-Russia militants, seized two government buildings in the region.

The soldiers have stationed themselves outside of airports in Simferpol, the region's capital, and Sevastopol. There's no sign they've entered any terminals, and flights are reportedly arriving and departing on schedule.

While Russia's Black Sea Fleet, which is stationed in Crimea, has denied any involvement in the incident, BBC reporters spotted eight Russian military personnel trucks heading towards Simferopol on Friday, and there have been multiple unconfirmed reports of eight Russian military helicopters in the area.

Oleksandr V. Turchynov, Ukraine's speaker of Parliament and its acting president, called a meeting on Friday of the National Security and Defense Council to discuss the situation in Crimea.

"Terrorists with automatic weapons, judged by our special services to be professional soldiers, tried to take control of the airport in Crimea," he said before the meeting, according to the New York Times.

His colleague, Ukraine's interior minister Aresen Avakov, described the incident in more detail on his Facebook page.

According to Avakov, at about 1:30 am Friday morning, several trucks carrying more than 100 troops entered the Simferopol airport with automatic weapons.

When Ukrainian security forces told the men—who Avakov said did not hide their affiliation to Russia— they did not have the right to be there and must leave, the men responded, "We do not have instructions to negotiate with you."

"Tension is building," Avakov wrote, adding: "I regard what is happening as an armed invasion and occupation in violation of all international treaties and norms. This is a direct provoking of armed bloodshed on the territory of a sovereign state."

Concerns about separatism and Russian intervention in Crimea, which, according to a 2001 census, is 58% ethnic Russian, have soared in Ukraine since last week's ousting of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and have slowed the process of establishing a new permanent government.

[Image via AP]

Your Spare Tire Is Taking Grubhub-Seamless Public

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Your Spare Tire Is Taking Grubhub-Seamless Public

Yesterday, I ordered both breakfast and dinner from Seamless. I didn't consume lunch since that would have involved leaving my laptop and walking across the street. Because I am disgusting, Grubhub, Inc.—the food delivery monster created after former arch enemies Seamless and GrubHub merged in 2013—is going public.

According to the S-1 filing, the company generated $137.1 million in revenue last year, a 67 percent increase from 2012. As Dan Primack notes, however, that Grubhub has declining profits on that rising revenue. Last year, net income was $6.7 million. The company says it has 3.4 million "active diners," which they define pretty broadly as unique accounts that have placed an order using their platform in the past 12 months.

The cap table isn't your typical venture capital roll call, although Benchmark's Bill Gurley , who has had the hot hand for months now, makes an appearance. There are also a number of leveraged buyout firms. Stockholders include: Spectrum Equity, Warburg Pincus Private Equity, GS Capital Partners, Thomas H. Lee Partners, Benchmark Capital Partners, Origin Ventures II.

GS Capital Partners has 8.9 percent of the shares, Benchmark owns 8.3 percent.

Your Spare Tire Is Taking Grubhub-Seamless Public

Your Spare Tire Is Taking Grubhub-Seamless Public

One of the sections under "Risk Factors," Grubhub says:

We make the restaurant and diner experience our highest priority. Our dedication to making decisions based primarily on the best interests of restaurants and diners may cause us to forego short-term opportunities, which could impact our profitability.

It's the SEC equivalent of answering the "Name one weakness" interview question with, "I work too hard."

We're still combing through the S-1 and will update if we find anything juicy.

[Image via jfwhite.org]

The Highest Paid Interns in Silicon Valley

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The Highest Paid Interns in Silicon Valley

We already know Google interns rake it in, but what about their high-pedigreed peers? They're also doing very, very well—how's $7,000 a month sound?

The top prize goes to Palantir interns—probably a pretty technically rigorous gig, albeit one with plenty of perks. Building tools for spies ain't easy, but at $7,012 monthly, it's well-compensated.

Other big, young monthly earners?

VMWare: $6,966

Twitter: $6,791

LinkedIn: $6,230

Facebook: $6,213

Apple: $5,723

Amazon: $5,631

These figures were put together by Glassdoor, which aggregates employer reviews and salary information. Now, back to your job.

You Want to Pick Up Women?

Look at This Horse-Headed Squirrel

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Look at This Horse-Headed Squirrel

When the Nobel committee awards this year's prize for Simultaneously Feeding and Humiliating Squirrels, the inventors of this horse-head squirrel feeder are definitely going home with the hardware.

Archie McPhee, the Seattle-based emporium of the weird that brought you a Punching Margaret Thatcher puppet, Ben and Jerry's Wavy Gravy, and bacon-flavored everything, has now entered the very competitive making-squirrels-look-like-horses industry. These are the first photos of a gullible squirrel testing their debut product in the wild.

So far, it appears to be going better than their experiment with giving a squirrel the head of a much larger squirrel.

[H/T: The Stranger, Photo Credit: Jim Zielinski/Archie McPhee]

"Do the Right Thing" Painted on House Next to Spike Lee's Old Home

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"Do the Right Thing" Painted on House Next to Spike Lee's Old Home

Two days after Spike Lee's anti-gentrification rant , someone spray-painted "Do the Right Thing" several times on a house next door to Lee's old home in Ft. Greene, Brooklyn.

The homeowner told NY1 he thinks the vandals were targeting the home next door, where Lee's father still resides. The homeowner said his door's windows were also smashed during incident.

Tuesday night, Lee delivered an impassioned, scathing critique of gentrification, which he claims has changed Brooklyn for the worse. From the rant :

Then comes the motherfuckin' Christopher Columbus Syndrome. You can't discover this! We been here. You just can't come and bogart. There were brothers playing motherfuckin' African drums in Mount Morris Park for 40 years and now they can't do it anymore because the new inhabitants said the drums are loud. My father's a great jazz musician. He bought a house in nineteen-motherfuckin'-sixty-eight, and the motherfuckin' people moved in last year and called the cops on my father. He's not — he doesn't even play electric bass! It's acoustic! We bought the motherfuckin' house in nineteen-sixty-motherfuckin'-eight and now you call the cops? In 2013? Get the fuck outta here!

Nah. You can't do that. You can't just come in the neighborhood and start bogarting and say, like you're motherfuckin' Columbus and kill off the Native Americans. Or what they do in Brazil, what they did to the indigenous people. You have to come with respect. There's a code. There's people.

The vandals also spray-painted a house belonging to Lee's brother, who didn't appreciate the anti-gentrification comments. From NY 1:

Lee's brother, Arnold Lee, says the filmmaker needs to think more before he speaks.

"Spike needs to stop with whatever situation he was talking about over here. Because he doesn't live here - and he's not involved in it. Don't make it personal. That way somebody knows where you live. My friend got her house damaged and somebody spray painted our house," Lee said.

Teen "Definitely Recommends" Using a Hot Pocket as a Cheesy Fleshlight

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Teen "Definitely Recommends" Using a Hot Pocket as a Cheesy Fleshlight

A teenager who's DTF pretty much anything you can put in a microwave just gave a revealing interview about how he became famous for getting all American Pie on a Hot Pocket.

The artist formerly known as @VERSACEPOPTARTS first entered the public eye when he tweeted an experiment with putting his penis through a box of brown sugar Pop-Tarts. He quickly followed that up with a Vine video showing him making sweet love to a Hot Pockets-brand food-like object.

The explicit footage got him banned from Twitter and Vine, and blocked by the official @hotpockets Twitter account, but he's got no regrets.

Teen "Definitely Recommends" Using a Hot Pocket as a Cheesy Fleshlight

"Yeah, I would definitely recommend it, if you're lonely. I wouldn't recommend putting it on Vine, but I'd recommend fuckin' a Hot Pocket probably. It wasn't bad. It's messy, though," he told First We Feast.

@VERSACEPOPTARTS is also a safe-sex role model who knows a true player always bags it up before penetrating a name-brand ham and cheese pastry:

Ah shit, dude. I tried doing it without a condom and it was just, like, way too hot. I put it in the fridge for a little bit and I was like, "Dude, I'm gonna have to use a condom if I'm gonna actually stick my dick in the whole Hot Pocket."

When he's not sticking it to foodstuffs on the Internet, the Versace of Pop Tarts is a recent high school graduate and—wait for it—grill guy at a seafood place.

Don't cry for his customers, though: He rates the food at his restaurant "would not bang."

[H/T: First We Feast, Photo Credits: @VERSACEPOPTARTS, Spike55151/Flickr]


Ga. Man Who Shot Confused Elderly Alzheimer's Sufferer Walks Free

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Ga. Man Who Shot Confused Elderly Alzheimer's Sufferer Walks Free

Local prosecutors said Friday that they won't pursue any charges against a North Georgia man who shot and killed a disoriented septuagenarian who'd wandered the neighborhood in search of his home one dark morning late last fall.

Via the AP:

Joe Hendrix, 35, fatally shot 72-year-old Ronald Westbrook on Nov. 27. The elderly man had slipped from his home as early as 1 a.m. and wandered in the cold and dark for hours until randomly approaching the home of Hendrix's fiancee on a rural cul-de-sac, repeatedly knocking on the door and ringing the bell. Hendrix's fiancee called 911, while Hendrix grabbed his .40-caliber handgun, went outside and confronted Westbrook in the dark. Hendrix told police that he fired four shots after Westbrook ignored commands to stop, identify himself and raise his hands.

District Attorney Herbert "Buzz" Franklin's office characterized the incident as a "tragic shooting death" in a written statement. Franklin did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

Hendrix had reportedly come over to his girlfriend's new house after she was spooked by an encounter with Westbrook at the front door. Westbrook's widow said "her husband had become confused about where he lived and struggled to identify those closest to him."

Westbrook—pictured above in photos from his Chickamauga home—was a Lions Club president and 33-year veteran of the Air Force before retiring and descending into Alzheimer's-fueled confusion.

Prior to the shooting, a police officer had spotted Westbrook walking the street, and the elderly man calmly told the officer he was getting the mail before returning home. "Nothing about the conversation alarmed the officer," the AP reported.

[Photo credit: AP]

[A pedestrian blocks the heavy winds with her umbrella in Los Angeles on Friday.

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[A pedestrian blocks the heavy winds with her umbrella in Los Angeles on Friday. The first wave of a powerful Pacific storm spread rain and snow through much of California, where communities endangered by a wildfire just weeks ago now faced the threat of mud and debris flows. Image via Damian Dovarganes/AP.]

Cool Bar Is Like Jail

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Cool Bar Is Like Jail

Hey are you looking for a fun new bar? Here is one.

Retired police officer of 27 years Stephen Barounis missed his old job so much, he decided to open a police-themed bar in Midtown called The 46th Street Stationhouse — complete with a police car, a precinct desk, a jail cell and a commissioner's room.

"I can bring you in in handcuffs and you'll actually think you're in a precinct," said Barounis

See u there.

[DNAinfo. Photo of the bar's hostesses: Getty]

A popular Japanese beach near the U.S.

Rape, Lies and the Internet: The Story of Conor Oberst and His Accuser

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Rape, Lies and the Internet: The Story of Conor Oberst and His Accuser

Last week, Bright Eyes musician Conor Oberst filed a lawsuit for libel against a reported "anonymous commenter" who posted on various websites that he raped her. But Joanie Faircloth was not anonymous—she left the original comments under her name, and her commenter account was linked to her Facebook. Her broad social-media presence left quite a record, too, and now it will be used to discredit her. It turns out the Internet is not a vacuum, and what we say can have very real consequences.

On her now-deleted Tumblr account, Faircloth clarified that she had not made her allegations anonymously.

"[T]he term 'anonymous commenter' was being thrown around a lot, as if I was some troll just trying to get a rise out of people. I wanted people to know that is not the case and for them not to be able to use that as a reason to discount my experience or avoid putting any real thought into the situation."

Not being anonymous also made her legally accountable for her statements. Oberst is suing Faircloth, a 27-year-old North Carolina resident, for $1 million in damages to his "reputation, standing in the community, shame, mortification, hurt feelings, embarrassment, and humiliation."

"Mr. Oberst gave Ms. Faircloth ample opportunity to retract her allegations prior to filing this lawsuit," Oberst's attorney Martin Singer tells Jezebel. "It was only when those requests for a retraction went unanswered that [he] had no other choice but to file this lawsuit in order to clear his name."

But clearing his name might be a tall order considering that the burden of proof is entirely on Oberst. Not only must he prove that Faircloth's statements damaged his reputation, he also has to prove that he didn't rape her and that she lied about it because she intended to harm him. Proving malice could be tricky: Why would she want to hurt Oberst? And why would someone lie about being sexually assaulted? What could be gained from that? Nothing, really.

Oberst's complaint implies that a different set of questions can be raised—about Faircloth's credibility and the veracity of her claims—from her long trail of online activity. According to court documents, she has a history of "catfishing"—posing as a boy online, even passing herself off as a cancer patient. And while none of that has anything to do with rape allegations, Oberst's legal team is making use of these details in order to tear down both Faircloth and her side of the story.

Clear History

In December 2013, Faircloth left a series of comments on an xoJane "It Happened to Me" essay about a woman who had been abused by her rock star boyfriend. Faircloth alleged that Oberst had raped her 10 years ago on her 16th birthday after going to a Bright Eyes concert. She got to meet him, she said, because his brother, Matt Oberst, had been her seventh- and eight-grade English teacher.

"Conor definitely took advantage of my teenage crush on him. At first, I was flattered when he was playing with my hair and had his hand on my leg. It was like my dream come true at that point. But then he clearly wanted to go further and I made it very clear and told him I was a virgin and wasn't prepared to change that right then but he didn't stop. It was a really fucked up way to realize that people you idolize and look up to so much can be shitty, terrible people […] Conor took a lot from me including my virginity, my dignity and self esteem."

The comments section on xoJane is powered by Disqus, a commenting service for websites that uses a network platform. Users can follow one another and their profiles can be linked to their Facebook, Twitter or other social networking accounts. So initially Faircloth's Disqus profile clearly identified who she was. However, upon realizing this she deleted the profile, which changed her xoJane comments to appear as though they were posted by "Anonymous."

Eventually, Faircloth's comments were removed entirely from xoJane, but not before they were archived and disseminated by thousands of people on Tumblr.

The increasing interest in her allegations prompted Faircloth to create her own Tumblr account, xoJaneCommenter, to expand her statements and answer questions from followers. The Tumblr has since been deleted, but not before posts were archived by Absolute Punk and BuzzFeed. In them, Faircloth admits that she never realized that her allegations would spread so quickly and considered xoJane a "safe community" where she could share stories with "one or two other commenters."

But nothing on the Internet is "safe," nor are conversations privileged to certain individuals. That Faircloth's deleted communications—both on xoJane and Tumblr—were almost immediately archived by others is evidence of that. Her story spread like wildfire through social media and was eventually covered by the mainstream media.

By the time Oberst issued a statement denying the allegations, it was seemingly too late. People believed he was a rapist. Even his die-hard fans were conflicted. (A moderator of one of his fan sites chose, initially, to believe Faircloth, befriending her online and posting about the allegations exclusively. Another fan site, OberstingWithConor, shut down altogether.) The day before Oberst's suit was filed, Desaparecidos cancelled their upcoming tour in Australia.

But in the same way that the Internet gave life to Faircloth's allegations, it has the potential to discredit them.

Petty Cache

Because Faircloth's Facebook account lists her birthday (January 25, 1987), it was pretty easy for even the most amateur of Google sleuths to find out that Bright Eyes had not played a show in North Carolina on January 25, 2003. When pressed about this, Faircloth, via Tumblr, said that she had gotten the year wrong. It was her 15th birthday in 2002. But the band hadn't played on her birthday in 2002, either. She then said that it wasn't a Bright Eyes show, it was a Desaparecidos show.

Desaparecidos, one of Oberst's side projects, did play a show in North Carolina on January 25, 2002, with Oberst's brother Matt's band Sorry About Dresden. Matt Oberst is also a middle school teacher in North Carolina, as Faircloth had originally said. So the revised version of her story checks out.

But Oberst's complaint points to some of Faircloth's recent Facebook activity, implying they conflict with her statements of being so traumatized by such a "vicious monster" that "[e]very time [she] hear[s] his name, [she] want[s] to tell people what he did."

In January 2013, Desaparecidos announced a reunion tour, and Faircloth commented on Facebook:

"The last time I saw Desaparecidos perform at the Cat's Cradle, it was my 16th birthday and Conor pulled me up on stage and sang happy birthday. Best memory ever!"

After people pointed this comment out to her, Faircloth deleted it. But the Internet is impossible to scrub clean. When confronted about the Facebook comment, Faircloth said:

"I really looked up to the older crowd that frequented the indie scene in chapel hill. and that night since I was brought up on stage I was the coolest kid there, everyone wanted to talk to me because I "knew" Conor. sometimes that overshadows what happened later and I suppose that says something about my self esteem. Sometimes I feel stupid to feel that I was raped because so many think they would love to be in that situation."

On December 3, 2011, Faircloth posted on Facebook:

Bright Eyes puts my 13 month old out without fail. We listen every night.

On December 7, 2011, she posted on Facebook that Bright Eyes is her favorite band. The posts were deleted in January 2014, but not before Oberst was able to make note of them in his complaint. In addition, Faircloth's new Myspace page is seemingly dedicated to Oberst's bands and his label Saddle Creek Records, which conflicts with her Tumblr statements about how she's "moved on from keeping up with these bands."

And there have been other inconsistencies with how Faircloth has portrayed her life in comments sections in ways that aren't related to Oberst. Sometimes she says that she gave birth to twins at 17 that she gave up for adoption. But in 2012 she won a local contest sharing her favorite memory: teaching her twins how to walk. Another time she said it was her sister who had twins, but one died in the womb. From the looks of her ex-husband's Facebook page, he does have a boy-girl set of twins that he raises without her. Sometimes he posts snarky jokes about deadbeat mothers.

On top of the dubious Internet history, people who know her personally have come forward with their stories about getting catfished by Faircloth, who posed as a boy named "Zac" in Yahoo chats. Zac professed to be a fan of Saddle Creek bands and claimed to know Conor and Matt Oberst. He mysteriously committed suicide in 2002 just before he was supposed to meet up with other fans at a Desaparecidos show. Friends learned of the suicide from Faircloth—then known by her maiden name, Finneran—who said she was Zac's best friend. It was later discovered that Zac and Faircloth were the same person.

The girl who said she was catfished by Faircloth claimed to have attended a North Carolina Bright Eyes show with Faircloth in 2003:

[Faircloth] also told me about a time, which I think it wasn't her 16th bday or at a show, in her version it was in the classroom when [Conor] came to visit Matt, that he sang happy birthday to her.

At the show in question in 2003, it was actually a Bright Eyes show, and I was there. I skipped my prom to see Bright Eyes and Sorry About Dresden was playing, and drove from out of town to come to NC because it would probably be the only time ever I would get to see Dresden. (It was) She and I made plans to meet, and we did, she was there with her best friend M, and her boyfriend X. She introduced me to Matt Oberst, and I actually know members who play with the Bright Eyes touring band, so I hung out after the show with them. If I remember correctly, she left before I did….even if she didn't she came and left with her BOYFRIEND, who rode in the same car as she did.

Absolutely none of this information is proof that Faircloth is lying about the rape allegations. But it does serve as a reminder that the Internet is constantly documenting what we say and do online, and that we should be careful about what we share, because it's not a safe space. You never know if or when a LiveJournal account you created when you were a teenager could come reemerge later in life. For someone like Faircloth, who has been posting about her personal life on public message boards since she was 13, her Internet ghosts could easily come back to haunt her—especially if she's pissed off a wealthy, socially conscious rock star with a reputation to protect.

Emo Money, Emo Problems

In his complaint, Oberst—a self-professed feminist—rips into Faircloth:

"[Her] statements…are not only malicious lies, but they are an insult to the millions of actual rape victims around the world. Faircloth should be ashamed of herself."

According to a source close to him, Oberst is "sick" over the notion that his lawsuit could make him a poster boy for MRAs, or that he is contributing to the silencing of rape victims.

His camp approached Faircloth several times asking her to publicly retract her statements, which she evidently refused to do. Instead, Oberst alleges in court documents that Faircloth began telling people—presumably online—that Oberst offered her "hush money" to keep quiet about the sexual assault, which he says is another lie.

Oberst plans to donate the proceeds of the suit to charities benefiting the victims of violence against women. But it's not likely that, even if he wins, he'll see a dime of the $1 million. According to a GoFundMe page that was started a few weeks before Faircloth first made the rape allegations, she is strapped for cash and is having difficulty even paying for travel expenses to care for her sick toddler.

According to a source, Faircloth is now saying that she never made the comments on xoJane.

Oberst's full complaint can be read below.

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