Pubdate: Sat, 11 Mar 2000 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2000 Albuquerque Journal Contact: P.O. Drawer J, Albuquerque, N.M. 87103 Website: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Author: Brendan Smith HACKER OPPOSES GOV.'S DRUG STANCE Gov. Gary Johnson's controversial views on drug legalization apparently was one motive for the hacking of his Web site two times over the past week. In an e-mail response to a Journal inquiry Friday, an individual claiming responsibility and using the name Nemesystm, leader of the Delinquent Hacking Corporation, explained his reasons for crashing the governor's Web site. "(The first hacking was) just to point out that not even the government has enough knowledge to simply password their site," Nemesystm wrote. "Second time because (Johnson) wanted to legalize drugs. I'm against that, but there's no way (I'm) telling my friends that." The FBI is investigating the hackings. During both hackings, all of the information about the governor and his recent action on bills from the Legislature were replaced by DHC messages and a link to the DHC home page. The second incident included some violent statements, said the governor's press secretary, Diane Kinderwater. "It was a message of violence and against students," she said Friday. "Their behavior is totally inappropriate." The site at governor.state.nm.us has since been restored but is still experiencing problems accessing some pages. The site should be completely restored by Monday, Kinderwater said. The computer vandalism also prevented the Governor's Office from using its e-mail system and has cost "about $20,000 in manpower and to put in the additional security, the firewalls," Kinderwater said. The Governor's Office didn't have time to increase computer security before the second hacking occurred Wednesday, Kinderwater said. Nemesystm agreed in his e-mail. "What increased security? I walked right on in again," he said of his second hacking. Johnson began a national campaign last year -- including a trip to Washington, D.C., at state taxpayer expense -- to push for the legalization of drugs including marijuana and heroin. Johnson has said the war on drugs isn't working. DHC already has defaced at least 18 other Web sites since Jan. 1, placing it fourth in the world this year among hacking groups, according to the computer-security Web service attrition.org. The DHC home page claims the group has defaced or hacked more than 160 Web sites. In his e-mail Friday, Nemesystm wrote that he originally was a "member of a kind of lame group. We called ourselves hackers, but we were just a bunch of kiddies." "I decided to make my own group with a special formula: self-made, self-written, self thought-up and found stuff," Nemesystm wrote. "So I started with my best friend and all as a member and we now have 14 members. We are quite close to each other." The Governor's Office has transferred its Web site to the state General Services Department, which has better firewalls against hackers, Kinderwater said. It will take weeks or months for the FBI to investigate the hackings of the governor's Web site, said Doug Beldon, spokesman for the FBI office in Albuquerque. "The perpetrator may not be just an individual," Beldon said Friday. "The governor's Web site may not be the only site targeted." Under New Mexico's Computer Crimes Act, Nemesystm could be guilty of a third-degree felony punishable by up to three years in prison and $5,000 in fines. But Nemesystm wrote that he feels he is helping the hacked sites identify computer security problems. "I think I put (hacking) to good use because when I just email a site about a security problem, nine out of 10 times they don't fix the security," he wrote. "Whereas with me defacing the site, nine out of 10 do." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk