Tony Trout, Former Greenville County Councilman, Sentenced in Computer Intrusion Case
At the time of the crimes, Trout was an elected member of the Greenville County Council. His criminal charges resulted from the unlawful use of a computer monitoring program that Trout first sent to Herman G. "Butch" Kirven, the Chairman of the Greenville County Council. Trout attached the program to an e-mail message that he sent from an anonymous e-mail account. When Kirven was unable to determine what the attachment was for, he forwarded it to Joseph Kernell, the Greenville County Administrator. As a result of Kernell´s attempts to identify the attachment, it was activated on his computer. It immediately began intercepting information and sending it to a computer in Texas where Trout was able to access and download screen shots of Kernell´s computer, keystroke logs of Kernell´s work, and usernames and passwords for private bank and e-mail accounts. Using this information, Trout separately accessed Kernell´s e-mail accounts, copied private messages, and posted them on the website that Trout used to communicate with the public. Trout also posted information regarding the location and passwords for Kernell´s online banking activities.
As a result of the investigation into these actions, Trout was arrested on October 1, 2008. After he was indicted by the federal grand jury, Trout was suspended from his office as a county councilman. Trout pleaded not guilty, and he was convicted by a federal jury following a three-day trial that ended on April 22, 2009.
Mr. Wilkins stated that the case was investigated by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant United States Attorney Dean A. Eichelberger of the Columbia office led the prosecution team with assistance from Josh Goldfoot, an attorney with the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section at the United States Department of Justice in Washington, DC.