Former FBI Supervisory Special Agent Miguel Clarke joins hosts James Maude and Marc Maiffret to reflect on 25 years at the front lines of cybersecurity. From coding in BASIC on his Commodore 64 to helping uncover the digital trail behind 9/11, Miguel shares raw, behind-the-scenes stories of how real cyber investigations unfold.
In this episode, you'll hear how a casual beer in Nebraska sparked a career in federal law enforcement, why psychology plays a critical role in executing search warrants, and how early cyber sleuths tracked international hackers with nothing but screen scrapes and UUencoded files. Miguel also takes us deep inside the Swedish secret police operation that caught the infamous Csaba Richter hacker, explores the rise of Eastern Europe’s cybercrime economy, and breaks down the forensic breakthroughs that helped investigators piece together one of the most pivotal events in modern history.
00:00 - Introduction and Welcome
01:32 - Early Technology Interest with Commodore Computers
03:24 - System Shock and the $2,100 Computer Upgrade Nightmare
05:22 - Gaming Influence on Career Path and FBI Power Dynamics
06:42 - The Beer That Started an FBI Career
10:03 - FBI Training and Imposter Syndrome at Quantico
14:11 - Sales Skills Meet FBI Investigation Work
18:04 - Search Warrant Psychology and Family Dynamics
24:08 - The Chaba Richter International Cyber Case
27:38 - Eastern European Cybercrime Economy Theory
31:51 - Evolution from Website Defacements to Nation-State Attacks
36:24 - Digital Aspects of 9/11 Investigation
42:25 - 9/11 Digital Forensics and HTML Tag Discovery
47:56 - Transition from FBI to Private Sector
51:32 - Leadership Philosophy and Closing Thoughts
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