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(HOUSTON) - A former contract employee of the Calpine Corporation
has been sentenced to prison for stealing the identity of a Calpine
Executive, acting United States Attorney Tim Johnson and FBI Houston
Special Agent in Charge Andrew R. Bland III announced today.
Robert
Smith, 28, who pleaded guilty in September 2008 to identity theft,
was sentenced today by United States District Judge David Hittner
to 12 months and one day in federal prison to be followed by a three-year-term
of supervised release. At his re-arraignment hearing in September
2008, Smith admitted that from mid-2006 through April 29, 2007,
while assigned to Calpine as a contract employee to maintain desktop
computer support services and entrusted with administrative privileges
to perform these tasks, he exceeded his authorization by "mapping"
the executive assistant's computer over the company's network to
his own computer.
"Mapping"
is the creation of a connection from one computer to another on
the same local network. This created connection enables one to access
the contents of another computer on the network which is not physically
connected. Smith obtained biographical and financial data belonging
to Calpine's Senior Vice President of Human Resources then used
the executive's information to apply for and receive fraudulent
loans from various online financial loan institutions for a total
of $6,054.31. In addition, the court ordered Smith to pay $27,944
in restitution to Calpine for the damages incurred as a result of
the intrusion.
Smith,
who has been on bond since his arrest on these charges, will be
permitted to remain on bond pending the issuance of an order to
surrender to a U.S. Bureau of Prisons facility to be designated
in the near future.
The investigation leading to the charges against Smith was conducted
by the FBI and was prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney
Bret W. Davis.
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