United States v. Bertram E. Seidlitz

589 F.2d 152, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7289
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 5, 1978
Docket76-2027
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 589 F.2d 152 (United States v. Bertram E. Seidlitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bertram E. Seidlitz, 589 F.2d 152, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7289 (4th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

FIELD, Senior Circuit Judge:

Bertram Seidlitz appeals from his conviction on two counts of fraud by wire in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343. 1 As grounds for reversal, he urges that the trial court erred in its denial of a pretrial motion to suppress evidence, and that the prosecution failed to establish certain material elements of the crime. Although advanced in a somewhat novel factual context, we find appellant’s contentions to be without merit.

On January 1, 1975, defendant Seidlitz assumed the position of Deputy Project Director for Optimum Systems, Inc. (OSI), a computer service company which was under contract to install, maintain, and operate a computer facility at Rockville, Maryland, for use by the Federal Energy Administration (FEA). Under the arrangement between OSI and FEA, persons working for FEA in various parts of the country could use key boards at communications terminals in their offices to send instructions over telephone circuits to the large computers in Rockville, and the computers’ responses would be returned and reflected on a CRT (cathode ray tube) terminal which is a typewriter-like device with a keyboard and display screen similar to a television screen upon which the information is displayed as it is sent and received. 2 Mr. Seidlitz helped *154 to prepare the software 3 which was installed at the Rockville facility as part of the project, and he was also responsible for the security of the central computer system. During his tenure, he had full access to the computers and to a software system known as “WYLBUR” which resided within them. 4 In June, 1975, Seidlitz resigned this job and returned to work at his own computer firm in Alexandria, Virginia.

William Coakley, a computer specialist employed by FEA, was assigned temporarily to the OSI facility. On December 30, 1975, in an attempt to locate a friend who might be using the OSI system, he had the computer display the initials of everyone who was then using the WYLBUR software. Among the initials displayed by the computer were those of his supervisor, who was standing nearby and who was not using the computer. Suspicious that an unauthorized “intruder” might be using these initials in order to gain access to the system, 5 Coakley asked Mr. Ewing, an OSI employee, if Ewing could determine what was happening. He also asked Mr. Wack, an OSI supervisor, if he (Wack) could determine whether the mysterious user was at a remote terminal or at one of the terminals within the OSI complex which were directly wired to the computer and did not employ telephone circuits. Ewing instructed the computer to display for him the data it was about to transmit to the possible intruder, and it proved to be a portion of the “source code” of the WYLBUR software system. 6 Using other data provided by the computer, Wack concluded that the connection was by telephone from outside the complex. At his request, the telephone company manually traced the call to the Alexandria office of the defendant. 7 Wack was told that the trace was successful, but the telephone company informed him that it could not divulge the results of the trace except in response to a legal subpoena.

The following day, OSI activated a special feature of the WYLBUR system known as the “Milten Spy Function,” which automatically recorded, after they had been received by the machinery at Rockville, any requests made of the computer by the intruder. The “spy” also recorded, before they were sent out to the intruder over the telephone lines, the computer’s responses to such requests. Mr. Wack again asked the telephone company to trace the line when it was suspected that the unauthorized person, employing the same initials, was using the computer to receive portions of the WYL-BUR source code. This manual trace on December 31 led once more to the defendant’s office in Virginia, although OSI was not so informed.

Advised by OSI of the events of December 30 and 31, the FBI on January 3 1 , 1976, secured, but did not then execute, a warrant to search the defendant’s Alexandria office. 8 At the FBI’s suggestion, the tele *155 phone company conducted two additional manual traces when alerted to incoming calls by OSI, but in each instance the calls were terminated before the traces had progressed beyond the telephone company’s office in Lanham, Maryland, which served 10,000 subscribers. The phone company then installed “originating accounting identification equipment” in the Lanham office, the function of which was to automatically and quickly ascertain, without intercepting the contents of any communication, the telephone number of any of the 10,000 area telephones from which any subsequent calls to the OSI computers originated. Two such calls were made on the morning of January 9, and the equipment attributed both of them to a phone at the defendant’s Lanham residence. That afternoon, the FBI executed the warrant to search Seidlitz’ Alexandria office, seizing, among other items, a copy of the user’s guide to the OSI system and some 40 rolls of computer paper upon which were printed the WYLBUR source code. 9 A warrant was then issued to search the Seidlitz residence in Lanham, 10 where officers found a portable communications terminal which contained a teleprinter for receiving written messages from the computer, as well as a notebook containing information relating to access codes 11 previously assigned to authorized users of the OSI computers.

The indictment handed down on February 3,1976, charged that the defendant had, on December 30 and 31, transmitted telephone calls in interstate commerce as part of a scheme to defraud OSI of property consisting of information from the computer system. 12 A motion to suppress the evidence seized from the office and the residence was considered at a hearing on April 30, 13 safter which the district judge rendered an oral opinion rejecting the defendant’s argument that the searches were invalidated by the use of illegal electronic surveillance to obtain the information contained in the affidavits supporting the warrants. Specifically, the district judge ruled that (1) as to the information obtained by use of the “spy”, Section 605 of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 605, does not apply, and neither Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510, et seq.,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Weindl
990 F. Supp. 2d 1099 (Northern Mariana Islands, 2012)
United States v. Green
259 F. App'x 601 (Fourth Circuit, 2007)
Audenreid v. Circuit City Stores, Inc.
97 F. Supp. 2d 660 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2000)
Arias v. Mutual Central Alarm Services, Inc.
182 F.R.D. 407 (S.D. New York, 1998)
United States v. Moriarty
962 F. Supp. 217 (D. Massachusetts, 1997)
United States v. Czubinski
First Circuit, 1997
Sanders v. Robert Bosch Corp.
38 F.3d 736 (Fourth Circuit, 1995)
Opinion No.
Arkansas Attorney General Reports, 1994
State v. Stevens
603 A.2d 1203 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1992)
United States v. Brooks
957 F.2d 1138 (Fourth Circuit, 1992)
United States v. Johnson
742 F. Supp. 294 (W.D. North Carolina, 1990)
United States v. Marshall Allen Slater
905 F.2d 1532 (Fourth Circuit, 1990)
United States v. Ronald Eugene Washington
852 F.2d 803 (Fourth Circuit, 1988)
Telerate Systems, Inc. v. Caro
689 F. Supp. 221 (S.D. New York, 1988)
United States v. Ishmael Gallop
838 F.2d 105 (Fourth Circuit, 1988)
State v. Thompson
745 P.2d 1087 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 1988)
United States v. Nation Edward Meyer, A/K/A "Stryker"
812 F.2d 1402 (Fourth Circuit, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
589 F.2d 152, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bertram-e-seidlitz-ca4-1978.