Cybercrime right out of movie lore
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Deepa Bharath and Marisa O’Neil
Police are investigating how the grades of seven Corona del Mar High
School students changed significantly and who, exactly, managed to
break into the school’s computer system and pull off the movie-script
crime, officials said.
School officials reported the illegal grade changes on Monday to
the police, said Newport Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman.
“Some of the school’s administrators noticed significant changes
in some of the students’ grades and realized that they had been
changed,” he said. “And each student had several grades changed.”
Administrators have identified the students whose grades have been
altered, but haven’t determined who hacked into the computer system,
Shulman said. Whoever accessed the system also deleted close to 1,200
files that had information about the grades and other personal
information such as students’ names and addresses, he said.
“But school administrators say they’ve retrieved all deleted files
including those with the seven students’ original grades,” Shulman
said. “All those files had been backed up.”
The seven students whose grades have been changed are “mostly
juniors,” said Jane Garland, spokeswoman for the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District.
Whoever tapped into the school’s server probably did so from an
outside mobile connection, she said.
The grade changes have happened only in Corona del Mar High,
Garland said.
“Each school has its own server, that’s how we know it’s
contained,” she said.
Garland said she doesn’t recall a similar incident happening in
the school district. The district has safeguards in place to ensure
it doesn’t happen again, she said.
“Every hole has been plugged,” Garland said. “And we’re making
what we call an ethical check to see what else we can find. But, it
seems to be limited.”
Several students have been interviewed, but no one has been
arrested, Shulman said. What detectives are still looking into is who
is responsible for the alleged crimes and how they did it, he said.
“We also don’t know if it was a student who did it,” Shulman said.
“If we find out it’s a student, [he or she] would be referred to the
juvenile justice system.”
That is a far more serious repercussion than anything faced by
actor Matthew Broderick in two movies from the 1980s. In the first,
“War Games,” Broderick’s character alters his, and a friend’s, grades
-- upwards, of course.
In the second, and more famous, movie, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,”
Broderick’s title character lowers his number of absent days.
But depending on the age of the perpetrator, he or she could be
tried as an adult too, Shulman said.
“But this is definitely a criminal investigation,” Shulman said.
“It’s a felony to go into a computer system and change valuable
data.”
Anyone with information is asked to call the Newport Beach Police
Department at (800) 550-6273.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@ latimes.com.
MARISA O’NEIL
covers education. She may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or by
e-mail at marisa.oneil@
latimes.com.
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