Pubdate: Wed, 12 May 1999 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Contact: http://www.bostonherald.com/ Note: First of two parts. WASTE.COM; PUBLIC EMPLOYEES USING INTERNET FOR SEX, DRUGS AND ROCK 'N' ROLL Taxpayer-funded Internet accounts - which are supposed to make public servants more productive - are being abused in government offices and schools throughout the state. Scalping sports tickets. Buying erotic Japanese comics. Exchanging drug-making tips. Soliciting sex from gay teenagers. Those are some of the improper, or illegal, ways Internet accounts are being used in government offices and schools, a Herald review has found. "Women Of Wrestling could be up by tonight! If you don't know WOW is a Free Nude women of wrestling page," said one message from a state Department of Education Net account. In the past year 402 e-mail messages were posted from that MassEd.Net account to promote a sex-and-wrestling Web site. Many agencies have acceptable use policies. But often they are poorly enforced, allowing conduct such as: At state Auditor Joseph DeNucci's Springfield office, an office manager hawked high-priced sports and rock tickets - a possible violation of scalping laws in an agency charged with keeping government honest. At New Bedford High School an Internet user posted drug-making and drug-buying advice on LSD and other hallucinogens. At Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino's office, one aide gave advice on "pen pistols" and other easily-concealed firearms. At Secretary of State William F. Galvin's office, an Internet user gabbed on the job in 324 messages about "The Simpsons" and other TV shows. These Internet messages were posted to public newsgroups - the equivalent of a worldwide bulletin board - and preserved in archives. The messages are easily retrieved with the search engine Deja.com. Often they are time-stamped, showing they were written during working hours. "There's a human tendency to abuse this technology, and it's important to get a handle on it by enforcing acceptable use policies," said Sam Tyler of the Boston Municipal Research Bureau. Numerous public servants went beyond cyber-slacking to engage in highly questionable, or possibly illegal, Internet conduct. In 22 posted messages, the auditor's aide resold - at a high markup - tickets for UMass basketball games, U.S. Open tennis matches, and Elton John and Rolling Stones concerts. "$600 or best offer for the pair. Will FEDEX to you - Email Reply if interested," the DeNucci aide, John E. Quinn, said in a message using a state Internet account to sell NCAA Final Four tickets. Quinn also sent other messages using a University of Massachusetts at Amherst employee account. "The tree you're barking up could be very harmful to me and my livelihood," said Quinn, contacted at his Springfield office. An auditor's office spokesman said the allegations would be investigated. At Boston City Hall, employee Matthew Donovan denied he used his city account to chat about guns. But mayoral spokeswoman Robin Bavaro said Donovan had previously been caught misusing the Internet and was suspended for three weeks without pay last year. Donovan's August 1997 messages discuss grenade launchers and MAC- Stinger "pen pistols" - easily-concealed .22 caliber firearms that look like writing pens. "Inappropriate use of the Internet will not be tolerated," Bavaro said. A Secretary of State Internet account issued to Carolyn M. Crapo was used during working hours to post 324 Internet messages about TV shows. "I admit there's a few odd things that could make one question Abe's sexuality," said one message to alt.tv.simpsons, discussing whether Homer Simpson's father is gay. Crapo's supervisor, Kevin Thibault, said lack of supervision allowed violations of Secretary of State office rules. Another state computer account, at the state Department of Public Works, was used to buy and sell erotic Japanese cartoons known as anime, including a cartoon series called "Rapeman," which glorifies rape. Employees offered for sale dozens of items, including a $125 piano accordion and a $400 Beanie Baby. Others advertised for roommates and vacation advice. The Herald review showed workers at Boston and Lexington public schools, the Boston Public Library, Andover and Shrewsbury town halls, the state Senate and the state Social Services and Administration and Finance departments also diverted themselves on the Internet. An account assigned to Stephen Sossaman, a Westfield State College English professor, was used to help organize protests by nudists angered by attempts to keep the Holocaust movie "Schindler's List" - which included nudity - off broadcast TV. Sossaman, in an interview, said he did not consider the e-mail to be a political protest. And he said the movie was within his field of academic expertise, popular culture. Another Education Department Internet account solicited casual sex with gay teenagers, in a message titled "looking for a little action" sent to the Internet newsgroup alt.teens.gay. "If you live in WMASS or Northern CT and want to have fun send me an e-mail. NO RELATIONSHIPS!!!!!!!," said a May 1998 Education Department message. The state's Internet program ushers in the information age for 22,000 teachers at a cost of $1.3 million a year. The nude Women of Wrestling Web site was being promoted by a Department of Education account issued to two schoolteachers at a school in the Worcester suburb of Oxford. But the real culprits were their two sons, 14 and 16. "I started the site because I'm really into wrestling. We put the nude pictures on because that's what guys want to see," the 14-year-old said in a telephone interview. "The e-mail account belongs to my parents. They use it sometimes for teacher stuff," explained the boy. Recently the Web page had advertisements for Visa credit cards and Swiss Army knives. And a Web counter showed it attracted more than 91,000 visitors. Tomorrow: Lovelorn Bay State inmates seek mates on Net. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D