CHP Dispatcher Arrested in Unauthorized Computer Use
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LOS ANGELES — A CHP civilian dispatcher described by authorities as a “wannabe outlaw biker” was charged Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court with unlawful computer access, a felony.
Bruce Paul Boysen, 40, of Sunland pleaded not guilty to the allegation that he used a California Highway Patrol computer to get unauthorized information for a man he thought was a member of the Mongols motorcycle gang, said Sandi Gibbons, a representative of the district attorney’s office.
The man actually was an undercover agent from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms who had infiltrated the San Fernando Valley branch of the Mongols, an investigation that led to the arrests of more than 40 alleged members of the biker gang in May.
Boysen met the agent at a Tujunga bar frequented by bikers, prosecutors said.
When the man asked Boysen to look up information about his motorcycle registration, Boysen did so using his CHP computer, Gibbons said. Agency employees are prohibited from using the computers for nonofficial business.
Boysen, who worked in the CHP’s Hollywood office, was arrested Friday. He was being held in lieu of $25,000 bail, Gibbons said.
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