

And they went out and utilised this information to what ever means that fitted them. And not only that, I gave all the other people in all the other jails all the information that they needed. Everybody there from the Lompoc Federal Prison knew me and what I was in there for and the much appreciated all the information I was giving them. So I'd get these people familiar with what things sounded like.Īs a result I generated close to two or three hundred phone phreaks from Lompoc alone. I'd have workshops, and we'd go to the payphone in the jail and try things out. People would ask me hundreds of questions. Prisoners in jail love this kind of stuff, they just eat that stuff up. They put me in jail, and look what they did, they put me in contact with the very people that you would never want to have access to this kind of technology - prisoners. That was the biggest, stupidest mistake they made. That caused a lot of rip offs for the phone company and that's what really cost them a lot of money.īy putting me in jail they basically created hundreds of Captain Crunches out there.
#CAPTAIN CRUNCH WHISTLE PHONE CALLS HOW TO#
After I got in jail I went out of my way to tell everybody how to do it. And that was my intention, I had no intention to go out there and rip them off. I was mostly interested in what you could do with the internal codes of the bluebox - that the bluebox gave me access to.
#CAPTAIN CRUNCH WHISTLE PHONE CALLS FREE#
So that really didn't mean anything to me as far as making free calls go. And they could connect me of charge on their watch-signs anywhere I wanted to go. I had any number of ways of making free calls available to me other than using a bluebox.Īfter being discharged from the military I had access to military phone system just because I knew a lot of people that were working at the base near where I lived. I was mostly interested in interesting codes you could dial and what you can do with a bluebox, than actually outright and making free calls. I had no really (sic) desire to go rip them off and steal phone service and evade charges. When I started I was mostly interested in the curiosity of how the phone company worked. When you started, did you realise what you would get yourself into? You've been a dominant figure in hacking since the early seventies. I thought the picture looked a little dorky. Newsweek magazine puts you in the list of the top twenty hackers. Going to as many raves as I possibly can. Anyway that's it, recently, now, I am very heavy (sic) in the rave scene.

Although they haven't have been bothering me since 1985 or '86 actually. Also even the FBI will come up and ask me questions, pertaining to the recent arrest.

The media people always come up and ask me questions. The name has stuck pretty much all this time and every time a big hacker arrest comes up I am always the person to be brought up. From about twenty years ago when the Captain Crunch cereal whistle was used to make free phone calls, and the name I picked was because it was an alias or a pseudonym that I used to keep anonymity. And I am sometimes known as Captain Crunch. John Draper, Interviewed Early 1995 By Tom Barbalet.
