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Did Feds' Use of Fake Cell Tower Constitute a Search?

hessian writes with this story in Wired: "Federal authorities used a fake Verizon cellphone tower to zero in on a suspect's wireless card, and say they were perfectly within their rights to do so, even without a warrant. But the feds don't seem to want that legal logic challenged in court by the alleged identity thief they nabbed using the spoofing device, known generically as a stingray. So the government is telling a court for the first time that spoofing a legitimate wireless tower in order to conduct surveillance could be considered a search under the Fourth Amendment in this particular case, and that its use was legal, thanks to a court order and warrant that investigators used to get similar location data from Verizon's own towers."

2 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Fed in the Middle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Are man in the middle attacks legal?

  2. Re:Criminals were captured by billcopc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Because sometimes the criminals are the ones on our payroll.

    If I set up a fake tower to sniff people's cell packets, I go directly to jail. That's practically indefensible.

    If the government does it "to catch a criminal", they need to request permission via the proper channels, i.e. warrants. It is a special privilege that must be diligently controlled and protected from abuse. If we start giving law enforcement officials (and their subcontractors) carte-blanche to effectively commit criminal acts, without oversight nor disclosure, in the name of crime-fighting, then democracy is effectively abolished.

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    -Billco, Fnarg.com