Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

SEC Drops Moody’s Fraud Investigation

By Jeff L in Crime, Electronic Fraud, Electronic Theft, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, Private Investigator, Safety, Screening, Security, Technology, Theft Investigations, court cases, fraud, technorati at September 7th, 2010 | No comments

MoneyMoneyMoneyThe Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that they decided to drop a fraud investigation into Moody’s, the credit rating agency. This, according to an article in the Washington Post.

Moody’s computer crediting ratings wrongly attributed AAA ratings to nearly $1 billion in debt, inadvertently causing the debt to show that they yielded high returns while offering low risk of loss. The computer malfunction occurred in 2007 and Moody’s repaired the error. They did not, however, change the debt’s triple-A rating due to possible repercussions that would obviously damage the company’s highly esteemed reputation.

According to the SEC, the investigation was dropped due to “jurisdictional limitations,” meaning that the debt notes were released in Europe, which was beyond the SEC’s scope of operations.  Now, a recently passed law allows the SEC to file suit against credit rating firms when they’re involved in fraudulent business practices outside territorial boundaries.

Three ratings services–Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings–issue letter grades to complex securities that help investors determine whether to take on the risk. The higher the rating, the lower the risk. However, Congressional investigation show that the ratings services gave high grades to risky notes, including subprime mortgage securities.

The rating agencies claim that they’ve restructured their operations, and that they issue opinions on debt security, and investors need to rely on other sources besides their ratings.

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Chicago Touts First Female Police Officer

By Jeff L in Attorney Services, Chicago, Crime, Criminal Records, Illinois, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, Police Records, Private Investigator, Safety, Screening, Security, Technology, technorati at September 7th, 2010 | No comments

PoliceWomanChicago is a historic city for many reasons, and if a federal agent’s (retired) claims ring true, the city may be known for the first female police officer.

Researcher Rick Barrett, a history enthusiast and former DEA officer, claims that while researching Chicago Police Officers long-forgotten, he came across the name of Marie Owens while working on another project in 2007. Barrett comes from a long line of men serving the  Chicago Police Department (CPD); his father, grandfather, and great grandfather were officers in the Windy City.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Owens was a “solidly built woman with long dark hair” who grew up in Ottawa, Canada. When she was in her twenty’s, she married, and moved with her husband to Chicago.

When her husband died, Owens had five children; she sought work, and began a job as a factory inspector enforcing child labor laws.

As public pressure grew around anti-child labor laws, Marie Owens moved from the factory floor to the CPD in 1891; “She was given powers of arrest, the title of detective sergeant and a police star.”

In a newspaper story written in 1904, Owens relayed her duties to the public, highlighting how she found “frail little things” working in horrid conditions throughout the city. During her career, she began schools so that children could be educated while working, and also pressured factories to cut the number of hours children worked.

After 32-years with the CPD, she retired in 1923.

According to Barrett, Owens was probably the nation’s first female police officer. For more history on Chicago’s first woman officer, check out the story in the Sun-Times.

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Care Trak Helps Locate the Lost

By Jeff L in Chicago, Illinois, Investigations, Locate Investigations, MSI Detective Services, Missing Children, Missing Persons, Missing Persons Investigations, Police Records, Technology, gps, gps tracker, technorati at September 5th, 2010 | No comments

CareTrakIn a story from the Daily Herald, Buffalo Grove Police in Illinois announced Care Trak, a new program that will enable them to track, and find, persons with special needs if they go missing during a city council meeting last week.

The system uses radio transmitters to “find individuals with Alzheimer’s, autism, Down syndrome and similar disabilities who may have wandered away. It is available to residents who meet the guidelines, which include having a full-time caregiver.”

Families who meet a “needs assessment” can buy the transmitters–about the size of a standard wrist watch–and secure it to the wrist or ankle of family members. Once attached and activated, the transmitter sends out a signal, which will allow police to locate individuals who are missing.

Once notified, police can use directional tracking devices to locate the missing individual; the range of the signal varies, about a mile on the ground or five from an aircraft.

According to the Daily Herald, sixteen departments in Northern Illinois use the system, including Schaumburg, Crystal Lake and Naperville. It has assisted in more than 2,000 rescues.

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Key findings of the 8th Annual 2010 BSI Computer Theft Survey

By MSI in Crime, Criminal Records, Safety, Technology, Theft Investigations, gps, gps tracker at August 30th, 2010 | 1 comment
Key findings of the 8th Annual 2010 BSI Computer Theft Survey of appoximately 20,000 Education and Corporate sector IT professionals:
More than half (58.7%) of the survey respondents have been the victim of computer theft in the last 12 months.
10% of all new laptops are stolen within the first year.
70% of all laptop theft is internal (an employee or acquaintance of the victim).
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