Finally cracking the DMV put a big smile on my face. It was a
supervaluable tool that was to come in very handy later on.
But I was still desperate to figure
out how much the Feds knew, what
evidence they had, how much trouble I was in, and if there was any way for
me to get out of it. Could I still save my ass?
I knew it would be stupid to keep up my investigation of Eric. Yet as so
often in the past, I was intrigued by the seduction of adventure and
intellectual challenge.
It was a puzzle I needed to solve. And I wasn’t going to stop.
Mark Kasden of Teltec called and invited me to have lunch with him and
Michael Grant, the son part of the father-son team that owned the company.
I joined Mark and Michael at a Coco’s restaurant near their offices.
Michael was a pudgy man who seemed very pleased with himself, to the
point of being a bit cocky. The two found it entertaining to draw me into
telling stories about my experiences. I made it clear how successful I had
been
at social engineering, which they also used, though they called it
“gagging.” They were impressed that I knew as much as I did about
computers and especially about the phone company. They were even more
impressed by my vast experience in tracking down people’s
addresses,
phone numbers, and so on. Finding people seemed to be an important part
of their business, a process they referred to as a “locate.”
After lunch they took me to their offices, on the second floor of a
building in a strip mall. There was an
entry area complete with a
receptionist, then a set of individual offices for each of the three PI’s and
three bosses.
A day or two later, Mark dropped by my dad’s to tell me, “We want you
to come work for us.” The salary wasn’t anything to brag about, but it was
plenty enough to live on.
They gave me the title of “Researcher” so as not to raise any suspicions
with my Probation Officer.
I was given my own small office, about as sparse as it could be: desk,
chair, computer, and phone. No books, no decorations,
completely bare
walls.
I found Michael to be intelligent, someone I could easily talk to. Our
conversations often boosted my self-esteem because when I showed him
things I could do that his other employees couldn’t, he would reward me by
expressing his admiration at a “wow factor” level.
What Mark and Michael wanted me to focus on first was a situation they
told me they didn’t understand. Those phone taps I had uncovered on
Teltec’s lines—why in the world would law enforcement be suspicious of
anything they were doing?
They had the names of two people they thought might be working the
case from the other side:
Detective David Simon, with the Los Angeles
County Sheriff’s Department, and Darrell Santos, of Pacific Bell Security.
“Do you know how to tap the detective’s phone?” one of my bosses asked.
I said, “Sure, but that’s too risky.”
“Well, see what you can find out about this investigation,” I was told.
I would discover, in time, what the Teltec honchos were hiding from me:
the detective had led a team that had raided the PI firm a few months earlier
for using unauthorized passwords to access TRW credit reports.
Good thing I wasn’t willing to investigate a cop—but taking on PacBell
Security was a different story. It sounded like a fun test of my ingenuity, a
challenge I might thoroughly enjoy.