Hairdresser charged with stealing Kevin Costner’s Apple PowerBook

“French hairstylist Pascal Bensimon turned himself in to sheriff’s deputies Monday, after a 14-month investigation implicated him in the theft of Kevin Costner’s laptop, which contained the actor’s private wedding photographs,” Troy Hooper reports for The Aspen Daily News. “The owner of the swanky hair salon on Hyman Avenue that bears his name, Bensimon, 44, was hired to provide hair services for guests attending Costner’s wedding to Christine Baumgartner on Sept. 25, 2004, at his ranch east of Aspen off of Highway 82.”

“According to an affidavit filed at the Pitkin County Courthouse, the day of the star-studded ceremony, Costner’s personal Apple Powerbook G4 disappeared, along with a digital camera that contained pictures of the wedding. The laptop is valued at $1,500,” Hooper reports. “A month later, Bensimon’s son allegedly contacted Apple Computers, proclaimed to be the owner of the laptop, and said he had forgotten the password needed to access its contents. Due to a technicality, Apple did not initially discover that the laptop serial number that Bensimon’s son referred to matched the one Costner reported stolen and a new password was assigned to the computer, the affidavit said.”

“Mark Sheppard, who works as a computer consultant for the Costner family, suspected Bensimon stole the laptop based on conversations he had with officials at Apple earlier this year. Costner’s wife, Christina, then contacted Phillips who said she believed her employer might have taken the computer. Meanwhile, investigator Ryan obtained a court order that enabled him to confirm Bensimon’s son had contacted Apple and requested a new password,” Hooper reports. “So last month, Sheppard posed as a freelance journalist for Travel & Leisure magazine under the guise that he was interested in writing a story about Pascal’s haughty hairdos, which fetch upwards of $400 for a woman’s haircut and coloring. Although Ryan could not legally participate in the sting, he asked Sheppard to notify him if Sheppard could confirm that Bensimon had Costner’s computer. Using an alias, Sheppard walked into Pascal Bensimon Hair Salon on Nov. 18 and requested to see photos of Bensimon’s work. The hairstylist brought out a laptop to show Sheppard photos of his work. Sheppard verified the serial numbers matched those of Costner’s computer.”

Full article with more here.
You just can’t make this stuff up.

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46 Comments

  1. The loony left strikes again on an MDN thread–yes, I’m talking about YOU, Lost Budgie & hack a mac.
    The government–the big, bad BUSH ADMINISTRATION–couldn’t care less what you losers have on your laptops.
    (And you obviously don’t have the slightest grasp of the Patriot Act.)
    Love,
    Kate

  2. Apple did not “give out” the password – they didn’t even have it. Most likely, they told the son to boot up using an original OS X install disc and launch the Reset Password utility. Select user, type in a new password. Simple.

    The only way to prevent this is to enable password on open firmware and/or File Vault

  3. For all those that say apple is giving out passwords… Apple is not giving out passwords what apple is doing is showing the user how to change the password on the laptop its self and in no way has access to ones password. There would be no reason for them to do so and it would also be a public relations nightmare if they actually did so and then got caught.

  4. Am I missing something or is everyone (including the thieves) unaware that you can change the system password by popping in an OS X install disc and select “Change Password.”

  5. Cut the anti-anti-terrorist paranoia
    said…

    The loony left strikes again on an MDN thread–yes, I’m talking about YOU, Lost Budgie & hack a mac.
    The government–the big, bad BUSH ADMINISTRATION–couldn’t care less what you losers have on your laptops.
    (And you obviously don’t have the slightest grasp of the Patriot Act.)
    Love,
    Kate

    Lost Budgie replies…

    I guess you haven’t read many of my other posts.

    Having personally obtained and then executed over 1000 search warrants on four continents during the past 25 years, and having personally walked into peoples homes, businesses and lives with the full power of law supporting my personal, individual on-the-spot decisions…

    AND having (in my earlier days) sat for months listening to authorized interceptions of private communications…

    … I’m always a little nervous about maintaining the balance between allowing law enforcement the tools they need to get the job done – and making sure that those tools are not abused through over-zealousness, corruption or a lack of civilian oversight.

    Most of us have no idea how easily and frequently our confidential information is traded away for as little consideration as a beer and a sandwich. Now, whenever new communications infrastructure is put in place, deals are made and back doors are always factored into end product.

    This back-door capability has been true of the phone system since the ’50s and is certainly true of many electronics and computer programs today.

    Even your auto’s computers can be downloaded in ways most can’t even imagine (even you geeks don’t know the half of it.)

    Yes, as I revised with my updated post, I now know that the password can be reset with an OS-X install disk. I am less than convinced that the File Vault system does not have a back door.

    Please read my blog if you need reassurance that I am not some sort of “anti-anti-terrorist” paranoid. If nothing else, it will be good for a chuckle.

    As always,

    Cheers,

    Lost Budgie

    http://lostbudgie.blogspot.com/

  6. Just Breaking in the New York Times…

    Kinda makes my point…

    December 15, 2005
    Bush Secretly Lifted Some Limits on Spying in U.S. After 9/11, Officials Say
    By JAMES RISEN
    and ERIC LICHTBLAU

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 ­- Months after the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush secretly authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on Americans and others inside the United States to search for evidence of terrorist activity without the court-approved warrants ordinarily required for domestic spying, according to government officials.

    Articlehere.

  7. There is no password based on serial number. If there was the case, Apple would have to manually burn in each bios with a different code. Then your laptop or PC will take longer for manufacuring and cost more for that labor alone. Each hardisk is mirrored and each motherboard is massed produced and put in the casing in the assembly line. Thats it.

  8. gheem says: “… the simple fact reamins that if I lost a laptop, I am SOL. A 14th month investigation!?!?!!??!?!?!? WTF!!!??!?!”

    Right you are. This whole story brought me back to my days of living in and around the Aspen area. Basically, you have a resort town populated by two main types – rich people, and people who want to be, or simply be around, rich people. The rich people expect heaven and earth to be moved if their coffee gets too cold (i.e. Kevin Costner in this case). The law abiding wanna-bees will move heaven and earth to warm it, just to curry their favor (that would be the cops, whose police cruisers are Saabs). Meanwhile, the shady characters will steal said coffee at the first opportunity, just to secretly feel superior to those they so desperately want to be. Often the wanna-bees and the shady characters are one and the same (as our French Hairdresser friend above).

    It’s a sick, twisted little place (think social inbreeding in the Appalacian Mountains, just on a much grander geographic and socio-economic scale), but – God help me – the women are hot and I did love the sking.
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  9. So, to summarise what probably *really* occurred:

    Thief doesn’t know that you can simply use a system CD to reset administrator password on non-FileVaulted Mac. And so doesn’t buy or steal Tiger (zero to $129) but instead family member actually calls Apple for help with resetting password. Clueless *and* stupid.

    Investigator goes to thief’s place of legit business, asks for stuff that might be on stolen merchandise. Thief trots it out and allows investigator to handle item and pull up a menu or two.

    Thief is foiled not by law but by stupidity.

  10. After a nearly two year “investigation” a stolen iBook was last reported seen in some seedy part of Witchita KS. The wife of the victim got this report this report from the WPD last March after calling in with a case no. and waiting on hold for about 20 minutes.

    Local poice said that earlier that month they had apprehended a juvenile drug offender who was still carrying one of the victims credit cards around. The alleged juvenile drug offender was asked if he had seen any other of the items that had been stolen out of the victims hotel room, (which included a digital camera, cellular telephone, and wallet), during a business trip in February of 2004.

    The jd gave the officers a description of a white laptop computer with an Apple logo that exactly matched the description given the attending officers immediately following the perpetration of the alleged crime. When officers asked the jd if he could recall the serial number, he replied, “…no I can’t.”

    To date no laptop computer bearing an Apple logo has been returned to the victim, and no further word from the WPD has been received.

    I hope the folks in Witchita KS are enjoying their new iBook – Who knows, maybe some of them will switch from Windoze to Mac.

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