Associated Press bulletin 12:57
p.m. ET:
WASHINGTON (AP) Law enforcement officials say the FBI
has searched the home of the son of a top Democratic state lawmaker
in Tennessee as part of its investigation into the hacking of Sarah
Palin's personal e-mail account. The officials say agents searched
David Kernell's Knoxville home over the weekend.
This is the first national MSM coverage of the Kernell
investigation, which has previously been left to Tennessee media
and bloggers. The LA Times had sneered at
bloggers for conducting an online "lynching."
UPDATE 1:50 p.m.: Now the full AP story:
The FBI searched the residence of the son of a
Democratic state lawmaker in Tennessee over the weekend looking for
evidence linking the young man to the hacking of Republican vice
presidential candidate Sarah Palin's personal e-mail account, two
law enforcement officials told The Associated Press on Monday. . .
.
Experts said the hacker apparently left an easy trail for
investigators.
"He might as well have taken a picture of his house and uploaded
it," said Ken Pfeil, an Internet security expert. "He should have
just set up a big beacon that said, 'Here's my house,' or
confessed. If they can't catch this guy based on all the
information posted on the Web then all bets are off."
It really wasn't that hard to figure out.
UPDATE:
Computer World reports that the Georgia-based proxy service
provider Ctunnel helped lead the FBI to the Knoxville apartment by
identifying the hacker's ISP. Justice Department spokeswoman Laura
Sweeney declined to comment on that report.
topics:
Sarah Palin, Law