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TV news anchor admits to hacking, leaking colleague's e-mail

Philadelphia's Mendte pleads guilty to accessing a protected computer

August 22, 2008 12:00 PM ET

Active Comments
GCL says: He should serve out at least 3 years - maybe as much as 5 - and be forced to pay...
Anonymous says: According to the Dep't of Justice's press release (a link was provided in the article), in August 2006, Mendte purchased...


Computerworld - A Philadelphia TV news anchor pleaded guilty today to breaking into his co-anchor's e-mail accounts more than 500 times and feeding information he found there to a local newspaper.

Lawrence Mendte, 51, of Philadelphia, made the guilty plea to one felony count of intentionally accessing a protected computer without authorization and obtaining information in furtherance of a tortuous act, according to the U.S. attorney's office in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (download PDF). Mendte, once a popular news anchor at CBS affiliate KYW-TV, secretly accessed one work e-mail account and two personal accounts of co-anchor Alycia Lane between March 2006 and May 2008.

Mendte faces a maximum of five years in prison.

Mendte used his computers at work, at his home and at his vacation home to break into the accounts. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Mendte accessed Lane's personal e-mail accounts about 537 times between Jan. 1 and May 26.

Mendte was released from his contract in June following an independent investigation by CBS, according to a story on the KYW Web site.

Lane was let go from the news station in January, according to the Philadelphia Daily News.

The government's information document contends that Mendte accessed private communications between Lane and her friends and her attorney. He also allegedly accessed some e-mails between Lane and a friend's wife. Some of the e-mails held attorney-client privileged information pertaining to civil and criminal litigation in which Lane was involved.

On several occasions, Mendte shared private and legal information obtained from the stolen e-mail documents with a reporter at the Philadelphia Daily News.



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