Intel Security Chief Steven J. Lund traveled to Buenos Aires in
May of 1995 to recover the company's technology. My brother
Victor took this picture of us at the Sheraton, which I later gave
to
Calvin Sims, the New York Times correspondent in Buenos
Aires. For legal reasons, the Times decided not to publish the
pic. The Clarín daily of Argentina obviously has a different
journalistic ethic. Not only does the paper publish it, but the
editors publish it without authorization. It's thus how Lund ends
up being the centerfold of the month.

Intel refused to tell the press whether Lund had been in Buenos
Aires, but make no mistake. It was Lund who
fired me from Intel,
who
talked to me over the phone, telling me that he was trying
to get approval from the powers that be to come down to
Buenos Aires, and who later started a
lawsuit against me in
Argentina. He requested and obtained a
search warrant. What
he found was
a suitcase with some Intel info. The U.S. District
Attorney Lee Altschuler requested that the suitcase be
transferred to the U.S.

What they didn't know is that the suitcase was a Trojan Horse
which I purposely left behind. In its urge to please its Yankee
masters, the Argie Gov unwittingly transferred exculpatory
evidence which the U.S. had the obligation to share with me at  
trial under Federal Rule 16. Now you know how things are done
among countries and what you have to do to defend yourself
against governments and multinationals.
The daily Argentine newspaper
Clarín carried the Lund's pic.
He became the centerfold of
the month!
Intel's
crown jewel
Intel's
bloodhound
Intel Security Chief and
ex-FBI agent
Steve Lund at
the Buenos Aires Sheraton
(May 14, 1995)
Steve Lund of
Intel Security today
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