You can edit almost every page by Creating an account. Otherwise, see the FAQ.

Glen L. Roberts

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki


Glen L. Roberts
Glen Lee Roberts.jpg Glen Lee Roberts.jpg
Roberts dining in Asuncion, Paraguay
BornGlen Lee Roberts
(1962-05-05) May 5, 1962 (age 62)
Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.
🏳️ NationalityStateless
🏳️ CitizenshipRenounced
💼 Occupation
Author, activist
🌐 Websiteglr.com
🥚 TwitterTwitter=
label65 = 👍 Facebook
Certificate of Loss of Nationality of the United States, issued by the United States Embassy in Asuncion, Paraguay. According to the document, Glen Lee Roberts had acquired no other nationality at the time of issuance, hence leaving him stateless.

Glen Lee Roberts (born May 5, 1962) is an American-born stateless author resident in Paraguay.

On June 21, 2013, Roberts left the U.S. Embassy in Asuncion, Paraguay, with a signed and sealed Certificate of Loss of Nationality of the United States.[1]

Conflict with U.S. government[edit]

During his time in the U.S., he spent many years as a privacy activist and published a newspaper titled "Full Disclosure". He was well known in some circles for his Stalkers Home Page[2] and for publishing a list of 4,500 Social Security Numbers of top U.S. military officers on the web.

1980s[edit]

ROBERTS, Glen L. v. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, et al. In 1983, Roberts brought suit against the Central Intelligence Agency for the release of documents under the Freedom of Information Act. His suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan was partially successful. According to the United States Department of Justice website: "partial Judgment for Plaintiff on Attorney's Fees and Costs (1985)". The website shows he was awarded $600.[3]

In 1985 he apparently drew the attention of then President Ronald Reagan. The "WALLER, DAVID B: Files, 1981-1986 – REAGAN LIBRARY COLLECTIONS" contains an entry entitled: "Glen Roberts v. U. S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance 08/01/1985".[4] "The United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is nothing new", noted Roberts.

His behavior also came to the attention of the FBI Director. In a SECRET memo dated in 1986, the DETROIT FBI office said, "GLEN ROBERTS, whose background is set forth in copies of his tabloid and the 'Ann Arbor News' newsclipping, interjected himself into the middle of this surveillance. He monitored and recorded the Agents' transmissions and apparently attempted to identify the subject under surveillance, undoubtedly to warn him of the surveillance."[5]

In a September 1988 article Roberts wrote for Agenda he attacked the Michigan State Police and the FBI about their surveillance activities. About the State Police, he wrote: "This [a police booklet titled 'Equipment System Limitations in Surveillance Operations'] is an inside look at the methods and techniques the Michigan State Police use to pry into the private lives of those who become a surveillance target." With respect to the FBI he reported, "some of the FBI's activities include the questioning of people who travel to South America, and insinuating that the Weathermen and SDS were somehow involved in the Anti-Meese protest a few years ago, not to mention the collection of huge volumes of information to use against people in the future."[6]

1990s[edit]

In 1991, Roberts published an article in his tabloid titled "Who's On The Line? Cellular Phone Interception at its Best". The article points out: "The 'Triggerfish' is a cellular telephone 'wiretapping' device manufactured and sold by Harris Corporation. The original Full Disclosure article on the NATIA conference and the 'Triggerfish' is reprinted above." The manufacturer of the Triggerfish, Harris Corporation, threatened Roberts with civil and criminal actions for his writing about their product: "The unapproved use of this advertisement constitutes a deceptive trade practice, which would potentially subject you and your newspaper to civil liability. Further, you have used our trademarks -- Harris and Triggerfish -- without permission" and "Lastly, you may have committed a felony under 18 USC 2512(1)(c)(i). This criminal statute prohibits the placement in a newspaper or magazine of an advertisement for an electronic product that is primarily useful for the purpose of surreptitiously intercepting electronic communications." Blockyouid has archived the text of Roberts' articles, Harris Corporations threats and his attorney's response.[7] In their paper "Your Secret StingRay’s No Secret Anymore: The Vanishing Government Monopoly over Cell Phone Surveillance and its Impact on National Security and Consumer Privacy",[8] Stephanie K. Pell of Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society and Christopher Soghoian of Yale University - Yale Information Society Project, note, based on Roberts' article, that "Despite their use since at least 1991, it was not until 1995 that a federal magistrate judge in California published the first decision analyzing a government application to use a digital analyzer."

Media attention[edit]

1980s[edit]

An Ann Arbor News article dated Sept 10, 1985 covers some of Roberts' earlier years and his dropping out of high school, as well as his FOIA lawsuit against the CIA, requests with the Ann Arbor Police Department for information on surveillance devices. Then Police Chief William J. Corbett seemed to take a somewhat neutral view of Roberts: "while smarting over some of Roberts' persistent tactics, Ann Arbor Police Chief William J. Corbett defends the citizen's right to check police files. 'People like Glen Roberts can be valuable,' Corbett said." However, Washtenaw Circuit Judge Patrick Conlin presented a different viewpoint. In a court hearing on a case Roberts had filed against the Police Department the judge remarked, "I absolutely will not allow another citizen to gain information on me or all other citizens in the City of Ann Arbor for your own particular whim or reason". In response to Roberts' attorneys answer, the judge reiterated, "I, as a judge, would not allow you or anybody else in this courtroom or anybody else in this county to request the federal government give you all the information they have on me".[9]

1990s[edit]

Beaver County Times, Nov 12, 1995: "Activist targets anti-snooping issues". The article, with a dateline of Oil City, PA (AP): "Glen Roberts publishes his newsletter for only 3,000 from a small printing shop in this quite, northwestern Pennsylvania town. But, the FBI, the Russian Embassy and the U.S. Secret Service are among the biggest names on his mailing list."[10]

In the book "Cyberwars: Espionage on the Internet", the author, Jean Guisnel, wrote on page 65: "Glen Roberts has a similar story: his site and the domain ripco.com were condemned. Clearly, moral order and free speech make bad bedfellow."[11]

CNET, June 26, 1996: "Stalker's home page scares Banyan"[12]

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 21, 1997: "Glen Roberts has three computers, several e-email address, dozens of his own Web pages and 2,760 Social Security numbers from faculty members of Indiana University. No one much noticed the first three until he got the last." According to the article, "The university told him to delete the list. He received dozens of messages from angry members of the faculty. The FBI was reported to be considering an investigation. Roberts was unfazed."[13]

According to the Post Gazette, "one of the more arresting sites on Roberts' Web site is something he has dubbed 'The Stalker's Home Page'. It lists scores of resources for finding information about people and the name has not endeared him to his ideological allies, not to mention his critics. 'Calling it The Stalker's Home Page' was a stupid idea,' said Shari Steele, a staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco based advocacy group. 'But it contains some very useful and helpful information.'"

The Daily Gazette, April 6, 1997: "Kids can find trouble on the net". By Reg Gale, Newsday: "A simple Web page run by Glen L. Roberts of Oil City, Pa. My boss, the managing editor, doesn't think we should put the name of this page in the newspaper, and the editor who sits next to me -- who has a couple of preadolescences of her own at home -- agrees wholeheartedly. But really, we know that any 14-year-old computer freak worth his salt will find it anyway, and relatively quicker than I did."[14]

In their Naval Postgraduate School Master's Thesis, titled, "An Analysis of the Use of the Social Security Number as Veteran Identification as it Relates to Identity Theft; A Cost Benefit Analysis of Transitioning the Department of Defense and Veterans Administration to a Military Identification Number", George R. Opria and Donald G. Maraska wrote: "In 1997, a major breach of high ranking military officers occurred when identity thieves obtained the SSN’s of over 40 officers in the U.S. Marine Corps and Navy. The thieves used the SSN’s to create fraudulent credit card accounts. This case brought a lot of attention to the military regarding identity theft, because a privacy advocate, Glen L Roberts had obtained the names and SSN’s of over 4500 military officers from the publicly available congressional record and posted them on the internet."[15]

Some of his actions resulted in critical comments in the media: Wall Street Journal, December 12, 1999: "Top officer's Social Security Numbers Public Information"[16]

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 4, 1999: "Web sites anger military"[17]

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 9, 1999: "Venango Web site linked to defauding of military leaders"

"But members of the military... said Roberts was becoming a threat to national security."

"Roberts should be less concerned with privacy laws and more concerned 'with physical laws, especially what happens when a closed fist hits him upside the head,' the paper Wall Street Journal quoted retired Marine General Paul K. Van Riper as saying." The United States Marine Corps and The Pentagon declined comment.[18]

2000s[edit]

The Titusville Herald reported on February 24, 2000, that Roberts had filed for business reorganization: "the filing under Chapter 11, which lists total incomes of $919,327 and debts over $140,000, will provide a court approved business plan to assure that Roberts' business continues in operation and state tax debts are paid in full." The article also noted that "the Michigan Economic Development Corporation issued a press release, also on Tuesday, stating that Roberts 'will lead a session regarding security and privacy at the second Information Technology Summit. The conference is in April and is hosted by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and Microsoft. The panel will also include Patrick Corbett, assistance attorney general, State of Michigan; and Claudia Rast, Dickinson Wright Law Firm."[19]

The Titusville Herald again reported on February 26, 2000, in an article titled "Privacy Advocate Shares Information", that "a self described privacy advocate who puts other people's Social Security and tax information on the Internet is sharing some personal financial information of his own. Glen L. Roberts of Oil City filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this week in federal court and was required to list his debts and assets."[20]

2010s[edit]

RT.com broadcast an interview with Roberts covering the topics of Bitcoin and stateless people. He discussed how there was only one location he could use bitcoin locally, however, he said "Now, when I received a MasterCard I can fund with bitcoin, I am able to use bitcoin for almost all of my daily expenses. I hope in future it has a positive impact on the lives of stateless people." The report also indicated that "He sees the lack of government regulation as the main advantage of bitcoin."[21]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Roberts, Glen Lee (2014). How to Renounce Your U.S. Citizenship in Two Easy Steps. ISBN 978-9995328955. Search this book on
  • Roberts, Glen Lee (2015). Bitcoin: A how-to guide for small business. ISBN 978-9995329754. Search this book on

References[edit]

  1. "Certificate of Loss of Nationality: Glen L Roberts, Earthling (Stateless)".
  2. "GLR: The Stalkers Home Page".
  3. "FOIA 1986 Annual Report - ADDENDUM TO THE 1986 ANNUAL REPORT".
  4. http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/textual/smof/waller.htm
  5. "GLR: Secret Memo to FBI Director (1986)".
  6. "Police Surveillance Manual Provides Rare Insight". Agenda.
  7. http://blockyourid.com/~gbpprorg/2600/harris.txt
  8. "Your Secret Stingray's No Secret Anymore: The Vanishing Government Monopoly Over Cell Phone Surveillance and Its Impact on National Security and Consumer Privacy". SSRN 2437678. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  9. "Who is Glen Roberts and what's he got against cops?". Ann Arbor News. 1985-09-10.
  10. "Beaver County Times - Google News Archive Search".
  11. "Cyberwars". google.com.
  12. "Stalker's home page scares Banyan". CNET.
  13. "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
  14. "The Daily Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
  15. "An Analysis of the Use of the Social Security Number as Veteran Identification as it Relates to Identity Theft; A Cost Benefit Analysis of Transitioning the Department of Defense and Veterans Administration to a Military Identification Number". oai.dtic.mil.
  16. "The Day - Google News Archive Search".
  17. "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
  18. "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search".
  19. "Titusville Herald". newspaperarchive.com. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  20. "Titusville Herald". newspaperarchive.com. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  21. "Stateless man hopes bitcoin will help all people without citizenship". rt.com.


This article "Glen L. Roberts" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.