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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 2 of 15
1/29/03: Bob Elliott from Basalt CO says: Microsoft needs to have a practical side (lab) to its exams just like Red Hat does for the Linux certification. That you can't fake.
1/29/03: Anonymous says: Check the ads on this web site and you will notice that this is all about money. "Top quality current 100% verified exams" "Get your MCSE in 14 days! Guaranteed" Are these braindumps too?
1/29/03: Richard Carson says: For those of us who worked and studied our ass's off way to go but the fake paper MCSE's will be discovered when they start working and once there weeded out we will get our proper recognition...
1/29/03: Chris from St. Louis says: I worked my butt off studying and getting my certifications. It took my 4 years of hands-on and 2 years of studying and test taking to get my MCSD and MCDBA certifications. I am damn proud I worked for it without cheating. I think Microsoft ought to have its own braindump site where it intentionally steers the wrong answer for key questions. When a test taker hits the key questions and answers with the braindump response, red flag the bastard and deny the certification!
1/29/03: Tom from Oakland says: Finally! I'm glad they got nailed. They contribute to the demise of our profession by defeating the goal of certification. But MS and others like Oracle have to take some of the blame for the diminishing status of certification too. They've made it too easy for people to cheat by not doing enough to combat it while maintaining certification as a revenue stream and little more. I've taken 10 cert. exams over the last 4 yrs and have lost faith in them.
1/29/03: Anonymous says: Chris, that's not really smart. Did you use test prep software? Did you go to a bootcamp? Did you take expensive classes? This is bu$ine$$ People is not really that stupid. They use the information from the braindumps to compliment their studies. They don't memorize the answers. It's not about people using this information but vendors not protecting the integrity of their exams. They should monitor more closely the training centers, exam providers, even MS employees! How can you explain that a Windows 2K design exam (security, AD or net infrastructure) that is designed to be done in 4 to 5 hours and that contains and average of 5 to 7 case scenenarios is available for free on the Internet?This is not braindumping, this is stealing the actual exam! Who are you going to blame now?
1/29/03: Robert from north carolina says: I studied for my CCNA with two years(saturdays) of lab and classwork at a local community college. I recieved my Cert the right way and I have been unemployed and looking for9 months. One problem is that here the local high schools turned out CCNA's like cookie cutters making it extremely difficult to get any entry level jobs. What damn difference does it make experience is the best teacher anyway. I can get certified in anything anyway. What certification means is that you have shown a level of commitment to a program. That goes for ever how you get the certification. If I am wrong prove it.
1/29/03: Anonymous says: Are you willing to spend a lot of money just to show commitment? Right now there is no ROI in pursuing certs. Use your money wisely in this economy. You can learn a lot about a product ( Windows 2k, Cisco, etc) without getting certified. Study to learn and practice what you know even in your home lab. Experience is what matters.
1/29/03: Anonymous says: Unbelievable, I checked the exam samples from TestKing and they are the questions word for word that I have seen in my exams. Wake up Microsoft!
1/29/03: Steve from Los Angeles says: The reality of the loss of value is NOT from the theft of the certification. Nor is the loss of value from there being "too many" qualified people out there, it is the value of what the market will bear. I am so under-certified and overqualified (all real working experience) because I am so busy when I am working for these contracts and employers that want everything for little to nothing. That is the mentality of today's employment market. A certification is something that takes effort and a degree of dedication if not brain-dumped. It's got intrinsic value beyond your earning capacity. Learn something more important than ONE company's software, such as how to SELL your self to an employer, and you WILL have a job. Sorry, but us technical people think our value screams to an employer about our worth to them. Unfortunately we all know that there are many others like us out there with simular certs, trying to get in for an interview with the same company. Learn about the people game, and the education will 'help' to differentiate you . Also, remember that it's not what you know, its WHO you know that matters. God Bless to all my unemployed brothers!
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