Matthew Weigman
Born20 April 1990 (1990-04-20) (age 33)
NationalityAmerican
Other names"Little Hacker"
Criminal statusReleased
Criminal chargeConspiring in swatting pranks
Penalty135 months in prison

Matthew Weigman (born 20 April 1990) is a blind American man who has used his heightened hearing ability to help him deceive telephone operators and fake various in-band phone signals. Before his arrest at the age of 18, Weigman had used this ability to become a well known phone phreaker, memorizing phone numbers by tone and performing uncanny imitations of various phone line operators to perform pranks such as swatting on his rivals.[1]

Early life

Matthew Weigman was born and raised in East Boston. Legally blind due to optic nerve atrophy,[2] he was capable of rudimentary perception of contrast in bright light.[3]

At the age of 11, Weigman came across party lines.[2] His friends said that after only a few years, he was absorbed in these party lines to the extent that he would spend days on the phone at a time.[2] Weigman learned tricks from other party line participants, recycled from telecommunication hacker groups known as Phone Phreaks of the 1980s, to gain free telephone service, frighten individuals whom he disliked and sexually harass women.[4]

First offense

At the age of 14, Weigman had already gained a considerable amount of skill and knowledge about phone hacking via party lines but had not yet used these skills to do anything illegal.[1] However, when a girl refused phone sex with him during a party line session, Weigman initiated a call to 911 with a forged Caller ID pretending to be a gunman holding her and her father at gunpoint.[5] Weigman was not indicted for his crime, marking the beginning of a "life long obsession" for Weigman who performed as many as 60 other forged SWAT calls prior to his indictment.[1]

Learning to hack telephones

Weigman had developed a keen sense of hearing and memory. He was able to impersonate any voice, and memorize phone numbers by listening to the phone tones, and he gained the skills to understand the inner working of a phone network system by listening to the different frequencies.[1] He had the ability to mimic characters he heard on television and play songs on the piano by ear.[1]

Weigman's first experience with phreaking was by accident. He was on a party line when he discovered that by pressing the star and pound keys, he could gain access to the numbers of all the callers on the party line. He realized that he could get the number of anyone that angered him and he could harass them at their home phone number.[1] At the age of 14, Weigman learned to gain access to Verizon and AT&T by imitating an employee of the company. Weigman was known for "conning telecom employees into believing he was a colleague to gain access to unlisted numbers, the ability to shut off a rival's service or listen in on others' calls".[6] He extensively employed the use of caller ID spoofing by purchasing commercial services such as spoof cards.[1] This allowed him to hide the identity of the phone number he was using, and also to choose any number he wished to display on the caller ID on the receiving end of the call.[1]

Incarceration

On 18 May 2008, Weigman and others drove to the residence of the Verizon investigator who was investigating Weigman's activity, and attempted to intimidate and frighten him. Weigman had admitted that he had already placed intimidating and harassing messages and calls to the investigator.[7] When Weigman's phone line was disconnected by Verizon because the phone line he was using was illegitimate, he infiltrated the Verizon phone system and used this information to harass the employee and to gain information about the status of the investigation that Verizon was conducting.[7]

On 26 June 2009, Weigman was sentenced to 11 years and 3 months by U.S. District Judge Barbara M.G. Lynn for convictions related to his involvement in a swatting conspiracy. He was in federal custody since being arrested in May 2008 in Boston.[5] In addition to making threats to a Verizon Security Officer, he attempted to hack into a US attorney's voice-mail system in Dallas.[5] Weigman pleaded guilty to:

"…one count of conspiracy to retaliate against a witness, victim or an informant, and one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud and unauthorized access of a protected computer."[8]

Weigman admitted that he and his allies gained unauthorized access to telecommunication companies' sensitive information to gather personal information on certain people. He also pleaded guilty to using software to modify telecommunication devices to gain free telephone service and to cut lines of other telephone subscribers.[8]

Weigman was incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institution, Fort Dix in New Jersey. According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, he was released on 20 October 2018.[9]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "14-year-old blind kid, angry and alone, discovered that he possessed a superpower – one that put him in the cross hairs of the FBI". Thepeoplesvoice.org. 23 August 2009. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 Morrell, Dan (February 2009). "Disconnected". Boston Magazine. Archived from the original on 28 March 2012. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  3. "Deceptology". Retrieved 6 August 2013.
  4. "Notorious phone phreaker gets 11 years for swatting • The Register". The Register.
  5. 1 2 3 Poulsen, Kevin (29 June 2009). "Blind Hacker Sentenced to 11 Years in Prison". Wired.com. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  6. Trahan, Jason (31 August 2008). "FBI: Teen Matthew Weigman tried to hack into Dallas' U.S. attorney's phone system". The Dallas Morning New. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  7. 1 2 Jacks, James T. (29 January 2009). "Individual Pleads Guilty in Swatting Conspiracy Case". The Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on 30 August 2010. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  8. 1 2 Wilonsky, Robert (29 June 2009). "The 19-Year-Old Blind "Little Hacker" Gets 135 Months in Federal Prison For "Swatting"". The Dallas Observer. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  9. "Inmate Locator: Matthew Weigman". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
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