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UPDATED: Prosecutor Recommends 18 Months Prison for Braindumper


1/29/2003 -- In anticipation of Robert Keppel's sentencing hearing in federal criminal court this Friday, the U.S. Attorney's Office filed a recommendation with the court yesterday that the owner of the now defunct Cheet-Sheets.com and CheetSheets.com Web sites serve 18 months in federal prison.

Keppel pleaded guilty in August to a felony charge of theft of trade secrets in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1832(a)(2). The charge stemmed from the sale of Microsoft certification exam questions through Keppel's Web sites. It is the first known successful criminal prosecution of a "braindump" site owner in the IT certification industry.

While the crime carries a maximum sentence of 10 years, Assistant U.S. Attorney Annette Hayes told CertCities.com that 18 months is the appropriate sentence based on her office's interpretation of the federal sentencing guidelines.

The guidelines take into consideration many factors, Hayes explained, including the approximate loss to the victim, how much planning the crime took, whether the defendant accepted early responsibility for the crime (as in this plea bargain) and the defendant's prior criminal record (Keppel has none). "We came up with a sentencing range of 18 to 24 months, of which we're recommending the lower end," she said.

At the sentencing hearing, the judge will consider this recommendation as well as one prepared by the probation office and Keppel's defense. CertCities's attempts to reach Keppel's attorney before press time failed. Keppel is currently out on pre-trial release. (EDITOR'S NOTE 1/30/03: Today, Keppel's attorney provided CertCities.com with a copy of the defense's sentencing recommendation. The resulting story can be found here.)

Federal sentencing guidelines are fairly strictly structured. However, when asked if Keppel could get probation, Hayes said that the defense may argue that this case is unique in some manner and that the judge should "downward depart" from the guidelines. "You never know what a judge will do," Hayes said. "I hate to speculate."

Hayes said that Microsoft has not been given access to the sites' customer list, and that the list played no part in the plea bargain or sentencing. Hayes said that for Microsoft to gain access to the list, it would most likely need to sue in civil court. She said that the FBI would probably destroy the list "unless it planned to prosecute those that accessed the material..." but did not specify what charge might apply. She added, "We have no plans to do that at this time."

Microsoft declined to comment on the case or related aspects before the sentencing hearing.

CertCities.com will report the results of the sentencing hearing on Friday.  - B.N.



There are 143 CertCities.com user Comments for “UPDATED: Prosecutor Recommends 18 Months Prison for Braindumper”
Page 15 of 15
3/14/03: Paul Guernsey Player from Clearwater, Florida says: Bob Elliott has it exactly right. Why multiple choice? The solution is to test abilities. "Write a SQL stored procedure that does x, y, z." "Create an XML Web Service that returns dataset containing ..." I'm sure Microsoft has some programmers who could figure out if you had done it correctly. Even if you knew the questions in advance, you would still have to DO IT. You would be demonstrating your competence, not memorization. My MCAD (VB.NET) helped me get a job after a year of studying from books and writing sample programs. Only my abilities will allow me to keep it.
4/2/03: Anonymous says: What I expect when I am hiring someone to work in the Network side of our IT operation is honesty. If someone is upfront with me about their actual level of experience, I am much more inclined to look upon them favorably as a potential employee. I wont start a paper MCSE off in the server portion of the operation, but I will consider them for a position in our desktop rollout/support area. I still remember the problems I had getting my first job as a mainframe programmer some 25 years ago, and the person who first gave me a chance in this business. For those of you have been burned, try checking on previous jobs and references. By the way, the MS non-disclosure agreement only prohibits you from transferring test information to others, not from being on the receiving end. All companies that provide sample tests claim that the information they are selling is proprietary to them, not MS. As many others have mentioned, MS might be better off to go to a hands on testing program similar to what Cisco has. Even though I am pretty much desk bound these days, I still do my Cisco CCNP re-certification every 3 years. This would also force MS to come up with real world tests instead of the nonsense they currently use. When was the last time you used LDIFDE without looking up the command parameters?
9/26/03: Anonymous says: I study hard for these damn microsoft tests. i have two more exam to get my MCSE 2000. I fail three time on 70-216 and two time on 70-244. i pass my 70 -244 this week with 795 and found out that the passing score is 700. i upset because ms had lower the passing score, in the last two exam i score a 700 and fail. that not fair!!!!! ms is like an big robber who steal your money and time but in a legal way. that is good that there are braindump out there.in the past i even do not know about this. i study the old fashion way, books and pratice. now i think i may look into some braindump, because what ms did.
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