Creators Syndicate FIGHT BACK! BY DAVID HOROWITZ Phone Cloners are Listening Any ordinary radio scanner, the kind people use to listen to police and fire calls, can pick up cellular phone conversations. But there's a different type of scanner on the market now that is made to monitor cellular phone data streams instead of conversation. Encoded in that data stream is all the information the thief needs to make a "clone phone" -- one that automatically charges calls to the legitimate subscriber's phone bill. These scanners can pick up transmissions from as far as 100 feet away -- from a freeway overpass or another car on the highway. They are sold by mail-order houses and electronic-supply stores all over the country. Making a clone phone is not particularly difficult for anyone familiar with computer and telephone technology. All the cloner does is remove the E-Prom chip from another cellular phone, erase the original information on the chip and then reprogram it with the stolen code numbers. When the cloned chip is put back in the phone, it acts just like the victim's phone, and all calls placed from that unit will show up on that person's monthly bill. Cloned phones are usually good for about a month -- until the legitimate subscriber reports the unauthorized calls to the cellular carrier and those codes are canceled in the system. This kind of fraud costs cellular carriers more than $300 million a year. And, of course, that cost is passed along to their subscribers. Illegally duplicated cellular phones are in great demand among drug dealers and other criminals who don't want their calls traced back to them. They're also used by long-distance phone-room operators who charge a flat rate for calls placed anywhere in the world. "It's very lucrative," says Clint Howard, who recently retired from his position as special agent in charge of the Secret Service office in Los Angeles. "It's a significant crime from our perspective," Howard said, "and one that we in the Secret Service are doing everything we can to control." The Secret Service and local police have raided phone- cloning operations all over the country and seized thousands of illegal cellular units. Federal penalties for this type of fraud are stiff -- 10 years in prison and a fine of $10,000 for each offense. But catching these people is difficult and time consuming. The cellular phone industry is using more sophisticated technology to trap phone cloners. Computers automatically track subscribers' charges, looking for sudden increases and changes in calling patterns. As more networks are tied together, computers can also spot calls being placed simultaneously from different locations. Newer digital cellular phone transmissions can be encrypted to foil the scanners. But with more than 17 million cellular phones already in use, converting from analog to digital equipment will take years. Carriers are understand- ably reluctant to force subscribers to exchange their analog phones for digital ones at their own expense. They would probably switch carriers, instead. Technology and law enforcement won't solve the problem entirely -- at least not right away. If you have a cellular phone, keep a close eye on your monthly bills. That may the first clue you have that you've been cloned. If you have any questions or comments, please write to David Horowitz in the Consumer Forum+ (go FIGHTBACK). COPYRIGHT 1994 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.