Snooping trial begins

Published: 10 February 2005 y., Thursday
All eight defendants facing charges related to the suspected illegal tracing of mobile telephone calls at the telecommunications service provider Sonera have denied violating anyone's communications privacy. Police suspect that members of the top management of Sonera had authorised the company's security department to illegally examine the mobile telephone records of employees to find the sources of leaks of information on Sonera activities to the press. On Monday, the first day of the trial, it came out that telecommunications information had been looked into by Sonera. The trial continues on Tuesday, at which time the prosecution will present further details of its case. The police investigation material that was made public on Monday gives a rough idea of why Sonera sought to trace communications between various people. At least five motives were revealed. Sonera's top management allegedly wanted to find out journalists' sources of information about the company, communication between Sonera's board of directors and managers, contacts made by former managers who had left the company, and the movements of a former manager who was trying to avoid being served by a subpoena. In addition, the security department of Sonera is said to have supplied the National Bureau of Investigation, the Security Police, and Helsinki police with unauthorised information.
Šaltinis: helsinginsanomat.f
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Romanian energy delegation to explore tie-ups

Romanian business delegation from the energy sector will be visiting India in March to explore possibilities of investment in refineries, oil and gas fields. more »

U.S. Court Deals Blow to Yukos Bankruptcy Case

A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Thursday dealt a blow to Yukos’ bankruptcy case, ruling the embattled Russian oil company cannot seek information about whether oil monopoly Gazprom illegally took part in the sale of Yukos’ main oil producing unit more »

Russia seeks to promote agricultural goods to EU market

Russian Agricultural Minister Alexei Gordeyev said on Saturday that Russia intends to promote production of its agrarian companies to the EU market more »

Crossing frontiers to safeguard the new euro

Security company wins contract with Austrian banks more »

Deutsche Bank Plans to Expand Operations in Russia

Deutsche Bank AG wants to expand its Russian banking operations and is considering purchasing stakes in two Moscow banks more »

Czech agency attracted $2B in investments

A government-sponsored agency said Thursday it attracted investments worth over $2 billion in the Czech Republic last year more »

Russia set to pay IMF $85.3 mln, 9.3 mln euros

The Russian Finance Ministry has set aside $85.273 million and 9.328 million euros for its next payments to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the ministry said more »

Russian govt endorses bankruptcy bills

The Russian government approved on Thursday a package of six bills intended to improve the country's bankruptcy laws more »

The Deficit of Trade Breaks the Absolute Record

The deficit of trade of the Republic of Moldova could exceed one billion USD in 2005 more »

The Negative Consequences

Labour Ministry: Interim period for labour from new EU states causes problems more »