Goggans was raided by the
US Secret Service on March 1, 1990, but was not charged. In a 1994 interview, he claimed he had never engaged in malicious hacking, explaining: "Malicious hacking pretty much stands against everything that I adhere to. You always hear people talking about this so-called hacker ethic and I really do believe that. I would never wipe anything out. I would never take a system down and delete anything off of a system. Any time I was ever in a system, I'd look around the system, I'd see how the system was architectured, see how the directory structures differed from different types of other operating systems, make notes about this command being similar to that command on a different type of system, so it made it easier for me to learn that operating system" "Sure, I was in The Legion of Doom. I have been in everybody's system. But I have never been arrested. I have never broken anything, I have never done anything really, really, criminally bad.” However, in a phone call intercepted by the Australian Federal Police as part of an investigation into Australian hacker Phoenix (
Nahshon Even-Chaim) Goggans was heard planning a raid in which the pair would steal source code and developmental software from
Execucom, a Texas-based software and technology company headquartered in
Austin, and sell it to the company's rivals. In the call, recorded on February 22, 1990, and later presented in the
County Court of
Victoria as evidence against Even-Chaim, Goggans and Even-Chaim canvassed how much money they could make from such a venture and how they would split fees from Execucom's competitors. During the call, Goggans provided Even-Chaim with a number of dial-up access numbers to Execucom's computers, commenting: "There are serious things I want to do at that place", and "There’s stuff that needs to happen to Execucom". While there is no evidence that Goggans and Even-Chaim acted on this discussion, Goggans' statement of his intentions calls into question the nobility of his hacking ethics. ==References==