FBI Targets Prankster Who Harassed Police
Suspect used Skype to place phony emergency calls
View Document
MARCH 30--In what should serve as a warning to telephone pranksters, the FBI last week raided the Wisconsin home of a 20-year-old man suspected of using Skype to place hundreds of hoax calls this year to sheriff’s departments in Florida and Minnesota.
The prank calls, placed to toll free emergency service numbers, resulted in deputies responding to many “false reports of individuals in danger, some of whom purportedly suffered life threatening injuries,” according to an FBI affidavit.
Federal agents began probing the rash of prank calls in late-January after being contacted by an investigator with Florida’s St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office, who reported that the agency had received about 180 prank calls that month.
A two-month bureau probe resulted in the March 21 raid of the Oshkosh, Wisconsin home of Mason Seckar, who is identified as a suspect in the prank calls. The FBI affidavit alleges that the calls constitute violations of federal laws governing harassing phone calls and threatening communications.
The FBI’s interest in pursuing alleged hoax callers like Seckar should be of concern to Pranknet, the members of which commit similar criminal prank call every day of the week (and broadcast them live on the Internet).
According to the affidavit sworn by Agent Sean Pruitt, Seckar is also suspected of placing prank calls to dispatchers with the Rice County Sheriff’s Office in Minnesota. Seckar did not respond to a message sent to his e-mail account, and his mother hung up on a reporter who called the family’s home.
One prank call cited by Pruitt involved a male caller who said he was in the bathroom of a McDonald’s with his “five year old girlfriend,” and that he wanted to be arrested. Fearing that a child was in danger, seven Florida deputies responded to eight McDonald’s locations, while five dispatchers worked for about two hours. “After extensive response by numerous officers from various agencies, no caller or victim was located and the call was considered a hoax,” reported Pruitt.
The prank calls seemed to come from a series of different phone numbers, though it appears the numbers were “spoofed” to hide the actual number from which the calls were placed. Still, the prank calls were traced to Seckar’s Skype account through an analysis of phone records and subpoenaed account information from Skype and Yahoo.
During a late-January call to Rice County’s emergency line, the caller claimed that he wanted to become a police officer and “wanted to know what it felt like to be ‘tased.’” He also claimed to be interested in becoming a school teacher, but was worried that he would “make inappropriate advances toward the young girls.”
The caller, Agent Pruitt noted, also said that “he was interested in airplane aerobatics.” Seckar is the creator/administrator of a Facebook page devoted to AirVenture, an annual Oshkosh air show featuring numerous aerobatic teams. (15 pages)
Comments (25)