Copyright (c) 1995 TELL 'EM BILL SENT YA By Michael Hahn In the summer of 1995, the Exon bill passed the Senate. The prurient popular press inadvertently helped it through the House, and President Clinton's veto was easily over-ridden by the heavily-Republican Congress. In the summer of 1997, newly-elected President Pete Wilson collaborated with his cronies in the Congress on the most sweeping "morals" legislation in eighty years... * * * Dave Jenkins finished the report with a sigh. He rolled the last page out of the platen, and draped the dustcover on the Selectric. As he straightened the stack of erasable bond, he remembered his days as a starving undergrad. No one really used computers for schoolwork in 1981, and he'd had a portable Smith-Corona with a couple of sticky keys. The ability to use a typewriter was now as much a part of his job as the degree he got from Columbia. "Agent Jenkins!" his boss boomed as he passed the open door. "Come on in here a second." "Yes, sir?" Dave said, sliding his trenchcoat from his shoulder to his arm. J. Arthur McDonald was a notorious stickler for decorum; agents who loosened their ties before leaving the building often found themselves transferred to a Bureau office in the southwest. Dave had no particular desire to work in a federal office building in a hot state with grumpy militia fanatics for neighbors. "Nice work on the Alexandria crackdown. Doggoned BBSes are like cockroaches; you pull off the baseboard and find a whole nest." McDonald studied a paper on his desk, then looked up at Dave. "Your work's been exemplary lately, Jenkins. I think you might find yourself promoted very soon now." "Thank you, sir." Dave was more than a little relieved. McDonald was usually passing out reprimands, not commendations. "Good night, Jenkins. Keep up the good work." J. Arthur McDonald returned to the papers on his desk, and Dave beat a hasty retreat. He stopped outside the building to loosen his tie and pull on his trenchcoat, then looked back at FBI Headquarters. At least he'd chosen a growth industry when he finished school. Given his background, a law degree had all but assured his recruitment by the Bureau. Law enforcement was about the country's only growth industry these days, at least among the legal businesses. Seven years after the Exon bill, computer networks were regarded as all but extinct. An occasional renegade BBS made the evening news, but in 2002, the Internet had been returned to the military and possession of a modem by a private citizen was a felony. Personal computers disappeared from desktops almost as quickly as they had appeared. Most businesses had simply chosen the better part of valor when the use of a computer became a suspicious act. The only real data processing took place on mainframes. IBM hadn't forgotten how to produce "big iron", and as some businesses dumped their desktop computers, they discovered a need to put the data someplace. As Apple and Microsoft evaporated, IBM, Digital Equipment Corporation, and Honeywell enjoyed a tremendous resurgence in their business. As he turned up M Street toward his Georgetown apartment, Dave considered his place in the grand scheme of things. As a rookie FBI agent, he'd found himself assigned almost immediately to the BBS task force. His was one of the last B.A. degrees in computer science awarded in a world dominated by personal computers, and his knowledge on the subject of communication networks made him a valuable commodity for an agency suddenly charged with enforcing the new "blue" laws. While computer bulletin board systems were not technically outlawed in 1997, the obstacles to running one became almost insurmountable. All BBSes were assumed to be trafficking in illegal material, and most judges looked the other way when law enforcement agencies played fast and loose with probable cause and search warrants. Equipment was confiscated and evidence was manufactured. The Federal Communications Control Act of 1998 outlawed networks operated by private citizens and levied heavy penalties against those violating the statutes. Most folks stopped fighting the trend. They traded in their computers for microwave ovens, and started watching more television. Dave punched in his security code on the keypad by the door, picked up the mail under the slot, and dropped his coat on a chair. He sorted the mail as he thawed a frozen dinner in the microwave. The inanities of "Lucy and Desi: The Next Generation" drifted in from the living room wallscreen. The blue envelope brought him up short. He tapped it on the counter, tore off one end, and pulled out a small slip of paper. "6001 Executive Blvd., Rockville, back door" was all it said. He read it twice, committing the address to memory, then ran water over the note and the envelope to dissolve them. The residue flushed easily down the kitchen drain. He ate slowly, reading a map of the area around the District. Rockville, Maryland wasn't far, and the address seemed to be near a Metro station. He finished his dinner, grabbed his coat, and headed for the subway. The train was crowded; more people were out on the town now that there wasn't as much to keep them home. Most theatres were doing a booming business, particularly those featuring revivals of old, safe plays. The move away from technology had changed the look of twenty-first century movies and television, and most people preferred the live theatre to the pablum playing at the local movie houses and on the wallscreens in their homes. Dave left the White Flint Station, walked across the parking lot and down Executive Boulevard. The streets here were almost empty, and he was conscious of his exposed position. With a deep sense of relief, he reached a stone-and-glass cube, ducked around to the back of the building. There were three steel doors in back, two of them clearly attached to a loading dock. He walked to the third, rapped sharply twice. A gruff voice from the other side of the door said, "We're closed. Come back tomorrow." Dave responded, "Billy G. sent me," and heard the beep of a security code being entered. The door opened briefly, and a large hand ushered him into the darkness. He was guided through the dark by an unseen man probably wearing night-vision glasses. They stopped, the man rapped on what must have been a door, then moved away. The door opened, and as Dave stood blinking in the sudden brightness, a voice boomed, "Howdy, stranger. Pull up a keyboard." "Hi, Doug," he replied, and looked around the room. There were a dozen people here tonight, each of them seated before a small computer. The workstations were all attached to a central system with a large monitor and a bank of modems. "Looks like a good setup. How long do you plan to stay here?" Dave asked the balding man beside him. "A couple of months, I think. The dummy site you raided in Alexandria will keep the Feds off our backs for a few weeks; thanks again." The balding man, once the sysop of the largest BBS in Florida, was on the FBI's "Most Wanted" list. "It's the least I could do. After all, we have my late sister in common." Dave settled in at a console, logged on to the BBS. His almost-brother-in-law returned to the central machine, the modems sang, and a small group of people resumed communicating via e-mail with the rest of the world. END