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Date: 2001-02-03
Hacker Schmitz hat hoch gestapelt
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Der auf den hinteren Seiten der Bild-Zeitung und in deutschen
Talkshows gern gesehene, angebliche Superhacker hat:
- Eine Firma namens Kiminvestor, die in 5 Jahren eine
Milliarde Euro wert sein soll, aber nirgendwo eingetragen ist
- Mitglieder eines Aufsichtsrats, die dementieren, dass es
einen Aufsichtsrat gibt
- Hausverbot beim CCC
- Angeblich 10 Prozent seiner nicht registrierten Firma zu 95
Prozent verkauft, um damit Letsbuyit.com zu retten.
Hintergrund
http://www.quintessenz.at/archiv/msg01410.html
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By Boris Grondahl and Rick Wray
LetsBuyIt.com thought it had found its saviour last week in
former hacker Kim Schmitz. But an investigation by The
Standard Europe has uncovered a tale of confusion that
raises serious doubts about the ability of Schmitz to fund the
aggregate buying network to profitability. It has emerged that
Schmitz's investment vehicle is not even a registered
company in Germany.
Schmitz, a convicted German computer hacker, emerged as
a white knight on 24 January, offering part of the 4 million
demanded by LetsBuyIt's Dutch administrators to stave off
immediate bankruptcy proceedings. He also promised that
his investment vehicle Kimvestor would provide up to 50
million euros to back the business through to projected
profitability in the fourth quarter of next year.
But it is hard to see what Kimvestor has to offer except
promises. The weekend after receiving the proposal,
LetsBuyIt's chief executive John Palmer held meetings with
Schmitz. It soon became clear to Palmer that despite
Schmitz's claims, Kimvestor has no funds at its disposal.
...
Schmitz is looking to raise 20 million euros by selling a 10
per cent stake in Kimvestor to new shareholders - a move
which will value the self-styled "start-up factory" at 200
million euros. Schmitz told The Standard Europe he had
successfully sold "95 per cent" of the 10 per cent share
being offered but declined to name the individuals backing
him. All he would say is that they were "well-known CEOs
and businessmen".
These backers are taking a chance on Schmitz. The
company, Kimvestor, has not been properly set up. Schmitz
offered these backers shares in Kimvestor in a private
placement which was backed up by an online prospectus
that claimed the business was founded in January 2000.
However, the German authorities have no record of the
business.
...
Under German law, a company can exist before it has been
registered, but this must be made plain to the authorities,
and would have been on record for the Standard Europe to
see. Schmitz has failed to follow this basic procedure. There
are other procedures that Schmitz has failed to follow: it
seems that Kimvestor doesn't control the assets which
Schmitz has claimed it does.
According to the Kim-vestor Web site, the business has a
share of three companies founded by Schmitz himself: Data
Protect, Megacar and Monkeybank. However these shares
are owned by Data Protect GmbH, of which Schmitz is chief
executive.
Schmitz also said that Kimvestor will "close an investment
fund worth 200 million euros on 10 February". He declined to
name the sources of his capital or the potential companies
he would invest this money in.
...
In Kimvestor's four-page prospectus, Schmitz promises that
the company will float within 18 months and be worth 1 billion
euros in five years. He also lays claim to a supervisory board
made up of three members of the German technocracy:
Gerhard Barth, the chief technical officer of the German
financial institution Dresdner Bank; Gerrit Huy, an executive
of media group KirchPayTV; and Dieter Haban of car giant
DaimlerChrysler.
In fact, a spokeswoman for Barth told The Standard Europe
that he is not on the board because there is none. Haban
explained that the board is currently being formed and while
he has full confidence in Schmitz, he knows little about the
operation of the business, nor whether it actually has any
funds. Huy was unavailable for comment.
As The Standard Europe went to press, LetsBuyIt's John
Palmer was trying to put the finishing touches to a rescue
package which will provide him with the 40 million euros he
has publicly stated will get the business to profit. That
package relies more heavily upon LetsBuyIt's existing venture
capital backers and new sources of funding than it does on
Schmitz.
With Kimvestor in such disarray, it is likely that Schmitz's
involvement in LetsBuyIt will initially have to be funded out of
his own pocket. His personal wealth is unknown and comes
predominantly from the sale of 80 per cent of software
security firm Data Protect early last year to TÜV Rheinland-
Berlin-Brandenburg, a technology firm.
The amount that Schmitz received for the business has never
been made public. However, TÜV spokesman Tobias
Kirchhoff said the business is not large: it employs just 15
people and has DM-denominated revenues "in the seven
figures".
More confusion surrounds Schmitz's criminal escapades.
Even his much-publicised claim to have altered the credit
rating of former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl is not
backed up by court records.
Schmitz styles himself as a hacker hero, but has few friends
among German hackers. This is at least partly because
some German hackers believe he shopped them to the police
when he was arrested.
The Chaos Computer Club (CCC) has barred him from its
meetings. The CCC spokesman Andy Müller-Maguhn
explains: "Nobody wants to be connected with him."
Members of the CCC also take a dim view of Schmitz's
bragging. In the Kimvestor prospectus he claims to have
hacked into Nasa, the Pentagon and Citigroup. But Müller-
Maguhn dismisses these claims as "made up". Schmitz -
who used the hacker nickname "Kimble", after Dr Richard
Kimball, star of the American TV series The Fugitive - also
claims to have once broken into Citibank and transferred $20
million (21.6 million euros) in small transactions from 4
million accounts to Greenpeace.
Sara Holden, a spokesperson for environmental campaigners
Greenpeace International says this is "just not true".
She added: "Twenty million dollars would have been half our
annual budget in the mid-1990s, and I am sure we would
have noticed this [boost to our funds]."
In fact, Citibank fell victim to hackers that caused $10 million
(10.8 million euros) in damages in the mid-1990s. But a
Russian hacker was charged and convicted of the break-in,
and he had no links to Greenpeace.
...
The verdict, announced by a court in Munich in March 1998,
states that Schmitz was arrested twice in 1994, at the age of
20, and detained for a month both times. He was convicted of
11 cases of computer fraud, 10 cases of "data espionage",
11 cases of what amounts to stealing business secrets, the
receiving of stolen goods and fraud.
However, he received just a two-year suspended sentence
because he was under-age when he carried out many of
these offences.
One of the charges related to a scam which earned Schmitz
over DM120,000. (61,000 euros). Having bought two thousand
stolen phone card account numbers from US-based hackers,
Schmitz then set up chat lines in the Caribbean and Hong
Kong and developed a computer program that automatically
called those lines using the stolen cards.
...
But perhaps the one crime that says the most about Schmitz
is the fact that when the college drop-out applied for a credit
card, he did so under his own name - but with the addition of
"Dr".
Full Text
http://europe.thestandard.com/article/display/0,1151,14368,00.html
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edited by Harkank
published on: 2001-02-03
comments to office@quintessenz.at
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