Computer Repairman Steals Hard Drive, Tries To Charge Company For 'Retrieving' Data

from the so-close-yet-so-far dept

It’s widely known that internal staff are the biggest threat to IT security, but what about your computer repairman? After a hard drive was stolen from Real Living Action Realty in Pennsylvania, the company called Kevin Andrew Lutes, who had done repair work for them in the past, to fix the machine. He told them he could retrieve the files, but the owner later called the computer manufacturer and learned that it’s impossible to do this… without the hard drive. Oh, and the police learned that Lutes’ car — computer repair sticker and all — was spotted outside the office on the night of the break-in. When he returned a few days later with the stolen hard drive back inside the computer and tried to charge the company $2000 for the “repair,” Lutes was arrested and charged with theft. You’d think that with potential access to the machine, he could have done something a little more subtle or sinister, but, lucky for the company, their repairman turned out to be a pretty dumb criminal. Someone should let him know that basing a business model on artificial scarcity is a bad idea…

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Comments on “Computer Repairman Steals Hard Drive, Tries To Charge Company For 'Retrieving' Data”

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23 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

“Why did the guy ever think anyone would believe he could magically pull those stolen files out of thin air.”

Apparently you’ve never worked at an IT helpdesk before. There are a plethora of users out there that think IT people are magicians that can make a computer do just about anything, including teaching pigs to fly. Granted, this one does have a pretty high “DUH” factor, but I rate it right up there with people who can’t understand that their office PC has to be left powered on in order to access it remotely, and I’ve dealt with plenty of them.

StrongArm (user link) says:

Re: Re: Re:

I agree I used to do a lot of tech support and we sometimes assume that non techy people know how a computer works. It’s not the case. Take my 72 year old father for instance, he somehow still seems to think that the Internet is on his computer after having it explained to hi9m a dozen times. I think it may be that fact that he just really doesn’t care or have to care.

This criminal is a shining example of the idiots we have next to us every day!

Rather_Notsay (profile) says:

Idiot

When I pull this scam I put a blank hard drive in the machine. That way they think the drive just failed. I pick up the computer, take to my shop, swap the drives out, and bring it back four days later. These data recoveries take time. That’s why they’re so expensive. It also helps to erase and corrupt a few files to make the whole thing more credible.

Easily Amused says:

Re: Idiot

kidding or not, this is a somewhat common brag I have heard from guys in my old tech support call center that used to have a work-from-home pc repair business.

Other gems are charging people for replacing a network card when the issue was an unplugged cable, $150-$300 to “clean out a virus problem” that involved running Spybot for 10 minutes, etc.

Part of the problem is that computers and parts have become so cheap that it is usually far more cost effective to just replace something than keep it serviced. So, the service guys have to pad the bill or outright lie to make a profit sometimes.

If you don’t have someone in your family or friends who is techie, network a bit and find someone in your kid’s friends, or a co-worker’s kid. They will be much more honest about the problem, probably fix it faster, rarely force a format/reinstall OS on you when it isn’t necessary, and they are usually very happy with whatever you think is a fair payment.

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Basing a business model on artificial scarcity is a bad idea? Really? Then why, pray tell, are the movie and recording industries still so profitable despite all of the “evils” of “piracy”?

And, why, pray tell, are both businesses struggling to keep up with modern technologies and seeing their revenue shrink?

Artificial scarcity may work for a short period of time… but it leaves itself wide open to being disintermediated.

mnk says:

It Could Happen

As a repair man with your best interests in mind I might have a copy of your data, created as a drive image the last time your computer was in the shop, or an image sent to an external drive to avoid making a problem worse, like virus removal or a hardware or software upgrade.

I have always tried to concentrate my clients in a small area so that I can go door to door, or be on hand quickly.

The question is who but a computer guy would steal ONLY THE HARD DRIVE in the middle of the night ?

Rekrul says:

A lot of people are saying that the criminal was dumb for removing the HD and that the company was dumb for believing that he could pull the files out of thin air. However…

Unless he left the case open, or someone at the company actually opened the case to look inside, how would they even know that the drive was missing? I mean, you turn on the system, it doesn’t find the drive and it display an error message, or just beeps. That someone physically removed the drive wouldn’t be my first assumption. I’d think that the drive died.

Maybe he was counting on them thinking that and he’d e able to tell them that he fixed.

Miss Foot says:

There are a lot of on-line boards

in which advice is freely dispensed in the threads by people who love all computers, particularly Mac. While I would take my Macs to The Genius Bar at the Apple Store to have it checked out if needed, the first place I would go is to an on-line geek thread for Apple Adorers. Much better than calling some strange over-priced repair dude who will rip me off worse than would a strange, over-priced auto mechanic.

Anonymous Coward says:

Meh.

“There are a lot of on-line boards in which advice is freely dispensed in the threads by people who love all computers, particularly Mac. While I would take my Macs to The Genius Bar at the Apple Store to have it checked out if needed, the first place I would go is to an on-line geek thread for Apple Adorers. Much better than calling some strange over-priced repair dude who will rip me off worse than would a strange, over-priced auto mechanic.”

I’m still waiting for a Mac that has every part replaceable by the end user when a fault comes to call. This is why PCs still remain, to this say, better than a Mac. I’m not citing the fact that PCs have the exact same variety of hardware for much cheaper or technically superior operating systems available. (Except Windows. Windows sucks.).

Do many Mac users even understand what UNIX is or why it’s a big deal OS X is a UNIX? IF not, then the entire UNIX component of OS X is wasted.

I’m saying this frankly as a Linux user.

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