FBI Says Search Warrants Not Needed To Use "Stingrays" In Public Places
schwit1 writes The Federal Bureau of Investigation is taking the position that court warrants are not required when deploying cell-site simulators in public places. Nicknamed "stingrays," the devices are decoy cell towers that capture locations and identities of mobile phone users and can intercept calls and texts. The FBI made its position known during private briefings with staff members of Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa). In response, the two lawmakers wrote Attorney General Eric Holder and Homeland Security chief Jeh Johnson, maintaining they were "concerned about whether the FBI and other law enforcement agencies have adequately considered the privacy interests" of Americans. According to the letter, which was released last week: "For example, we understand that the FBI's new policy requires FBI agents to obtain a search warrant whenever a cell-site simulator is used as part of a FBI investigation or operation, unless one of several exceptions apply, including (among others): (1) cases that pose an imminent danger to public safety, (2) cases that involve a fugitive, or (3) cases in which the technology is used in public places or other locations at which the FBI deems there is no reasonable expectation of privacy."
How is this not, basically, wiretapping (for which a warrant would ordinarily be necessary)?
Glad that's settled.
They do, however, require a license to transmit on those frequencies, which they do not have.
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
The FBI doesnt get to make that decision, A Judge or congress will
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
is vindicated more and more every year, it seems.
You know its got to be bad. I didn't know he was aware that Americans were allowed privacy.
We engineer our space craft to come down within 15 inches of our chosen return point.... with an acceptable margin of the entire earth. It hits within the acceptable range every time!
"I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
Has any law enforcement agency ever maintained that they need a warrant for anything?
When I hear the courts say you don't need a warrant, then I'll believe you.
In response, the two lawmakers wrote Attorney General Eric Holder and Homeland Security chief Jeh Johnson, maintaining they were "concerned about whether the FBI and other law enforcement agencies have adequately considered the privacy interests" of Americans.
In other words, what is the minimum action necessary to walk the line between two points of view and not be forced to actually take a stance and defend it?
So if I should happen to live next to a public place, and their signal penetrates my walls into my private residence, can I sue them for trespassing and for intercepting my calls in a place where I would have an expectation of privacy?
Of course not. *sigh*
And it is well known that our Government now considered ALL CITIZENS as criminals who merely have not been convicted yet.
Don't these things violate FCC regulations by causing harmful interference (to our privacy, and the wireless providers ability to serve their customers)? Do trival things like FCC regulations mean nothing ?!?!
So if they tap a wire at the curb, it's a public place, and no warant is required?
on a phone call? These people are trash, they destroy our freedom for the sole purpose of making their job easier. Yep, the terrorists won by turning us against ourselves.
Interfering with the orderly operation of vital infrastructure would be a crime if done by an ordinary person.
Why can the the police get away with it, without any special permission.
There is a debates on More or less government control... That is the wrong question. The debate should be towards what actions will improve the freedom and liberty of the individuals.
I am not faulting the police for wanting such technology, it is there job to solve crimes, and any tool to help them do their job is good. However as a society, we need to stand up and say "We are willing to sacrifice safety for more liberty."
But right now we are no longer home of the Brave. Thus we are no longer becoming the land of the free.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
3) cases in which the technology is used in public places or other locations at which the FBI deems there is no reasonable expectation of privacy
I think it would be easier to list the miniscule exceptions to where the monitoring occurs.
“Wise men say nothing in dangerous times”
Aesop
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Trials are unnecessary, we can just lock everybody up who we think might possibly have been suspicious at some point, and it'll all be for the best.
Heck, let's just go for broke, and make the FBI and the rest of the police the new rulers of the country, who needs elections? They ARE THE LAW!
This is addressed to the plutocrats, so ill keep it short and sweet. I get that the cloistered elite arent to be concerned with this, but your cash cattle certainly care. If we keep going down this road, you can expect to lose everything. we will stop using your app stores, stop using your wireless towers entirely, and form small mesh networks as was the case recently in China. these networks in 20 or 30 years will grow into an encrypted tor mesh, from which you will realize no revenue outside of the occasional new "cell phone" you decide to belch forth. your films and music will never earn another cent. and in the short term i'll buy an inexpensive mp3 player and leave my phone sitting at home, turned off, as most of us should. This should be of grave concern as well, considering ubiquitous passive wireless scanning systems employed in some of the largest stores in the world would certainly become far less reliable without a willing and oblivious captive audience.
and most importantly you'll have created a new generation of hardened hackers and leakers who now believe in retribution, as freedom is clearly subject to arbitrary terms and conditions outside the realm of a government by, of, and for the people.
Good people go to bed earlier.
interception is essentially wiretapping over the air.
Just because you CAN do a thing does not justify you actually DOING it and claiming it is "OK" for you to do so. Privacy must be respected.
probable cause must exist and a judge must grant the order first.
That is a decision to be made by a judge in a court of law.
If the FBI is going to use such data in a case against anybody, which indicates that it's data that belonged to the suspect, then said data constitutes as papers or effects of the suspect, and so it DOES require a warrant.
If the FBI would get upset about a random citizen using said device, then what makes them think they don't need a warrant?
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
They can do things that drastically infringe on basic rights and freedoms without oversight and consequences. The police in all its forms becomes more and more like criminal gangs and grab every bit of power than they can get.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Maybe someone should explain the three branches of government to the FBI, *they* don't decide what warrents they "need"...
Somehow I doubt they'd see it the same way if someone setup a rogue femtocell on the sidewalk outside an FBI office...
What does this button d$#%* NO CARRIER
i guess i didn't realize that the devices could distinguish if you are on a public side walk vs on your private lawn/apt next to the sidewalk...
just preparing for the next election cycle
Does this let a mall cop deploy an xray machine at the mall to see through pretty girls clothes, saying in public, clothes should not provide them with an expectation of privacy?
Sent from my ENIAC
Just like the true Stingray can only live under water, these Stingray devices, I've heard, stop at the lawn. The CANNOT, by definition, trespass the space line between the sidewalk and the lawn, so you'd be safe if you were standing on the lawn. They can crawl over concrete, though. So they can go up your driveway and onto your porch, but the threshold into your house/apartment stops them dead in their tracks.
Is that a roll of dimes in your pocket or are you happy to see me?
cases in which the technology is used in public places or other locations at which the FBI deems there is no reasonable expectation of privacy.
In other words; anytime they damn well feel like it. So where is the outrage?
This is a no-brainer. It is impossible to determine from a radio wave if the transmitter is in a private space or a public space. An office in an office building may or may not be legally private space. A vehicle is private space (as far as voice communication is concerned.)
This is the real key to killing this government spying. Holder's Federal Bureau of Stasi will lose this one real quick.
Because when you are in a public place you have no right to the expectation of privacy
Cellphone signals do not stop conveniently at the walls of your dwelling. How do you propose they sort out which signals are only coming from a public location? (Hint: they cannot)
Whether a communication goes over a physical wire or via the airwaves should have zero legal bearing regarding whether a warrant is needed. The police still need a warrant to tap my phone calls from work. Why should wireless be subject to different rules merely because it isn't tied to a specific physical location?
If you are walking and talking down the sidewalk in town other people are able to hear your side of the conversation.
And the police are welcome to listen in to what I say out loud in public. That doesn't mean they are automatically granted the right to hear both sides of the conversation. For that they need a warrant. The party on the other end of the conversation has rights too.
A StingRay detector for some rooted Androids exists: http://www.tomsguide.com/us/an...
So, I could see crowdsourcing StingRay mapping. Rooted Android + SnoopSnitch + IOIO board + interface application + Google maps + web site. If enough snoops were deployed, you could have a real time map of all StingRays in operation.
Just like the true Stingray can only live under water, these Stingray devices, I've heard, stop at the lawn. The CANNOT, by definition, trespass the space line between the sidewalk and the lawn, so you'd be safe if you were standing on the lawn. They can crawl over concrete, though. So they can go up your driveway and onto your porch, but the threshold into your house/apartment stops them dead in their tracks.
^ Poe's law may apply
"Don't meddle in the affairs of a patent dragon, for thou art tasty and good with ketchup." ~ohcrapitssteve
Here is how it was explained to me by a lawyer.
This also applies to cordless phones - you know the ones where the handset is wireless but you still have a landline.
The laws are outdated. Anything broadcasting a signal over the air doesn't require a warrant. Cops can intercept it at will. And so can you.
The question shouldn't be if they can legally do it. The question should be why is this type of interception even possible without the cooperation of the phone company? If they can do it, so can the "bad guys".
But the AG is appointed, not elected.
That third case ("cases in which the technology is used in public places or other locations at which the FBI deems there is no reasonable expectation of privacy,") is the reason why we need things like black phone, silent circle, encrypted phone lines/connections, encrypted text messages, encrypted everything. The laws might be outdated, but the technology isn't.
They don't want to respect our privacy or the US Constitution? Let's make it too difficult and expensive for them to keep trying to mess with us.
(1) cases that pose an imminent danger to public safety,
So basically, ANY public gathering at all, whenever 2 or more are together, for any purpose.
(2) cases that involve a fugitive, or
Any *political* demonstration. Or any time the cops allege a "fugitive" is out and about.
(3) cases in which the technology is used in public places or other locations at which the FBI deems there is no reasonable expectation of privacy."
Any time anyone is on the street with a mobe in their pocket.
Pretty straightforward!
what's so terrible about getting a warrant?
I blame the assholes who use speakerphone and almost-yell in the middle of restaurants. How can you expect phone calls to be considered private when you can be heard through the whole restaurant and the person you're talking to can be heard 3 tables down?
APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
https://play.google.com/store/... https://opensource.srlabs.de/p...
I've been summoned to serve for federal jury duty next month. I dearly hope I get one of these cases.
Actually, anything would be better than the financial fraud case I served on last time. We found the bastard guilty but the conviction was later thrown out by a judge.
FBI Wrong
Oh, the judicial branch of the FBI.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
We have a DOJ that ignores or unequally applies criminal law, natural law and the constitution.
We have judges who can be extremely activist and not rule properly.
We have a president who ignores the legislative branch when he doesn't get what he wants.
We have senators and representatives who take bribes, uh I mean campaign contributions.
What in the world could possibly go wrong?
This is actually good news. I can now sell Stingray towers and devices on ebay and anyone can use them anywhere they wish.
Those things are easily detectable with just an arduino with gsm shield, event without connecting to any network or even a sim card, just by dumping the id's and strength information to the terminal and little thinking about the numbers seen.
Item #3 is the Catch-22 of this. According to the FBI, no one has a reasonable expectation of privacy when on their cell phones in public, yet if they are using a public land-line phone, they would have to get a search warrant. What's the difference between public cell phone usage, and phone usage at home? The cell towers are still "public" even if you use your phone at home. This is just so disengenuous! And dangerous!
So we can get more freedom hating republicans in power? They are the assholes that started this whole mess. What president signed the PATRIOT act?
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
The use of unwarranted electronic intercepts of data belonging to Canadian and EU citizens is a clear violation of both the US/EU Data Privacy Treaty and the US/Canada Data Privacy Treaty.
By our US Constitution, international treaties signed by the US Senate, as both of these were due to majority affirmation, have higher legal standing.
The FBI is lying.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Because they are used in public. With no expectation of privacy.
Still, he needs to make King Obama look good if he wants a decent job post-election.
Even in a public place, you have reasonable privacy. People can't just snap up your data because you're in a public place. It is still protected between your cell phone and the cell system. That is one hell of a bogus "gotcha".
They are blatantly breaking the law, and trying to claim extra-judicial privilege to do so. They are citizens, just like you and me. They should be arrested and put on trial.
its not about how did what, its about points to be spun. or having in your arsenal something to counter all the freedoms hating decisions made under the democratic party.
Personally i hold both parties responsible. IMHO the blame lies directly with the people and agencies that carry out these decisions/policies. Just following orders was never a good defense.
If, in order to use this neat service called Personal communications, a person must carry a gadget which continuously broadcasts that person X is at location Y,
1) Why does the FBI need to actively transmit anything to get a log of the (X,Y) pairs?
2) Why does the person have any expectation that the FBI will not do this with passive means?
3) Why does this expectation of non-privacy give anybody the right to an unreasonable search (hack of the gadget) by active means?
4) Why does the market not demand a gadget using secure methods between the gadget and network to provide an expectation of privacy?
I think the counter-argument to that is "Defense in depth".
From a cost/benefit analysis though, who knows.
How do they limit the interceptions to a public space? What they are suggesting sounds a bit like saying that tapping into private phone lines is just fine as long as the telco box where they do the tapping is in a public space -- sure those lines may lead to a private residence, but if the signal can be tapped from a public space, then it's fair game.
So if I stream a video on my phone and the FBI records my connection, they'd then have an illegal copy of the video on their hard drives. Just sit back and watch the MPAA go to town over it. Better stream a few songs while I'm at it too...
Just like the true Stingray can only live under water, these Stingray devices, I've heard, stop at the lawn. The CANNOT, by definition, trespass the space line between the sidewalk and the lawn, so you'd be safe if you were standing on the lawn. They can crawl over concrete, though. So they can go up your driveway and onto your porch, but the threshold into your house/apartment stops them dead in their tracks.
That's all well and good until the creepy violin music starts... Then all bets are off.
This isn't a real threat.
The typical person don't have the capability of building and maintaining a device capable of what you described, and if people want them there'll be a market for mass produced units. The plutocrats will be the ones making a profit on those devices, the software, and any valuable data that can be reasonably held hostage by a DRM scheam or even simple lazyness.
Back in the analog days, after a few embarassing phone conversations were recorded in a few places in the world, any radio scanner sold in the USA had to block out the 800 mhz cell frequencies. Clearly, someone thought the general public listening in was a bad idea. Now, the conversations are in an encrypted spead spectrum format. A Casual listener cannot hear anything. A stingray is decrypting this proprietary format. I would argue a HUGE expectation of privacy when using a cell phone, despite it being a radio device. Clearly, you need to be very motivated, or very government, to hear it.....
I'm sure this means that, since police don't need warrants to perform monitoring of communications, that private citizens are free to do so. Thinking otherwise is illogical.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
Not only that, but I think everyone here is missing a big point : as far as I know, a stingray does not snoop on a phone conversation, since it would need to be connected to a phone company's telephone backhaul network to either a mobile switching office (think older switched telephony) or to a SIP gateway. Rather, a stingray acts as a stand-alone site which your phone inadvertently registers with, but if you attempt a call or send a text message you'll get a failure.
What it does is gather basic info about your phone - ESN & phone number, your carrier, and perhaps GPS coordinates (for E911). It can't snoop on your phone conversations because you can't place a call. Someone more up to date on 3G and 4G wireless networks can elaborate, My info is based on older 1G/2G cellular networks...
"A little misunderstanding? Galileo and the Pope had a little misunderstanding."
The FBI is lying.
And?
In case nobody has noticed, liars are highly rewarded. In fact, I'm thinking of becoming one myself. The opportunities look fantastic!
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Welcome to the new world. You have no privacy, and only those rights that the wealthy accord you, when they deem it appropriate.
Because co-opting the public communications system in order to implement mass surveillance SHOULDN'T require a court order. . . . . . . .oh . . wait a second. . . .
*I've always wondered about the risks of parallel construction. When law enforcement makes up stories, they are risking geting caught in a lie under oath. Even if that is revealed and they offer to drop charges, a judge with some balls can still charge them with contempt. That this doesn't happen and LE keeps playing their game indicates to me that they have dirt on most of the judges they bring cases before.
Have gnu, will travel.
This is nothing new. Whenever the FBI puts a wiretap on some new technology, they try to argue that they can do it basically anywhere with no judicial oversight because those people they are snooping on don't have a "reasonable expectation of privacy."
They tried to pull this kind of funny business all the way back in 1967, Katz v. United States -- same shit, different decade.
If I'm having a conversation on my cell phone out on the sidewalk, and I am discussing something private, I am very aware of how loud I am talking and who is or is not listening to me. It's completely reasonable to expect that the government isn't going to wiretap your fucking phone and record all of your texts and conversations just because you're using it outside of your home. ESPECIALLY text messages -- people on the sidewalk can't read my fucking texts, I write private things on there all the time that nobody sees!
https://play.google.com/store/...
Of course, even if conversations cannot be evesdropped, the metadata can be very useful.
If you want true privacy your always welcome to talk to yourself. QUIETLY!
If the police want your thoughts they will have to get a warrant. In the US we probably have a few more months left protection from self incrimination
There's no difference between this and the Feebles setting up in the street outside the post office, stop each postal truck, open each letter in the truck and copy. Then repackage, place back in the truck, and send it on it's way.
Just like the true Stingray can only live under water, these Stingray devices, I've heard, stop at the lawn. The CANNOT, by definition, trespass the space line between the sidewalk and the lawn, so you'd be safe if you were standing on the lawn. They can crawl over concrete, though. So they can go up your driveway and onto your porch, but the threshold into your house/apartment stops them dead in their tracks.
This is true, but can be misleading. See, the FBI uses Soccer out-of-bounds rules. So, it's not over the line until the whole-of-the-signal is over the-whole-of-the-line. Unfortunately, due to the wave-form nature of the signal, this means the surveillance is only actually illegal after they have turned the device off.
Just like the true Stingray can only live under water, these Stingray devices, I've heard, stop at the lawn. The CANNOT, by definition, trespass the space line between the sidewalk and the lawn, so you'd be safe if you were standing on the lawn. They can crawl over concrete, though. So they can go up your driveway and onto your porch, but the threshold into your house/apartment stops them dead in their tracks.
That's all well and good until the creepy violin music starts... Then all bets are off.
So the firewall is based on audibles?
Oh just wait until I turn on the BrownSound IDS. You're gonna shit yourself when you hear those features...
They have since project paperclip, when we allowed without any repercussions Nazi's to occupy the highest levels of government.
Yes, America is ran by Nazi's, which explains our police state and extreme national socialism.
Facts.
Your Congress can clarify this in one day by making it federal law that a warrant is *always* required.
Have you made them, yet?
If the cops can do it without getting any exceptional permissions, then it must not be a crime for private citizens to do it, either. Right? Right? (Why is everyone looking at me like I just said something amazingly naive? And WTF is with all the Blade Runner "little people" quotes? I saw that movie and don't remember that many midgets.)
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Your Congress can clarify this in one day by making it federal law that a warrant is *always* required
Do you seriously think that it's in the interest of the Congress to protect the little people ?
If in fact, you still think that the Congress we have right now really cares about the little people please tell us when was the last time the Congress even lifted a finger to do the right thing?
I'm not shouting text messages in Central Park at people. It should not matter where I'm standing, there is ALWAYS a reasonable expectation of privacy because it is MY device, and it should only communicate real information to the person I want to communicate with. I am ok with cell providers being unbiased and blind messengers of my information, like postal workers. Postal workers should not open my mail, and by the same logic, no one should read my texts unless I send it to them specifically. Beyond providing the technology that allows the communication, I don't want them knowing anything about me unless I tell them officially.
Other people, law enforcement or not, are not allowed to open my mail either.
This is not the FBI's call. Only a court can decide if they have that power. Since when do we let law enforcement make up the rules?
Of course the way courts have been going against us the last few years, I don't see them restraining the FBI from doing anything it wants to do.
Enjoy your freedoms while they last. They won't be around much longer.
So since a warrant isn't required, then you can destroy them without any issues too.
Does this sound like stop and frisk to anyone? But more like going to a place and stopping and frisking everyone there and without probable cause and searching not just your pockets but your conversations with people who aren't there and without them knowing that it's happened? Looks like we need more secure phone systems. How about requiring that cell towers have signed encryption keys? How easy would it be for the cops to force telecoms to hand over the keys?
Couldn't one write a program to detect Stingray presence by having a database of all possible cell tower IDs and matching the ID of the one to which you're connecting against that list? Since the Stingray relays your intercepted call to a real cell tower it presumably doesn't spoof a real ID. Now that I think about it, I guess in order to prevent the Stingray just using an ID for a cell tower that's out of range but real, you'd have to add in knowledge of your geolocation so as to exclude distant towers.
The government can make all kinds of claims, the big thing is their claims are 100% legal until someone challenges them in court. That is why the DOJ is desperate to keep the use of Stingrays out of the court system so the courts can't rule their use requires a warrant. As long as no one ever says no, they are going to keep pushing the line further and further back.
Reasonable person you are.
Hahahahahahaha http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net...
How would these operate without the help of the telecommunications provider? I can understand they act like a Femtocell and can intercept outbound calls,text, and data, but they could only do inbound with cooperation of the cell provider delivering the calls to the stringray/FemtoCell.
You really have no idea what Nazi means do you?
No cell phone: no problem.
We don't need them. We just don't.
So we can all truer the FBI to make the determination for us where we can expect privacy. That'll end well.
Aparently they can also determine that the person on the other side of the call is also in a public space, so they won't have any expectation of pricacy either...
FBI needs to read 1st amendment for the first time.
They might actually be right... It is basically a radio transmission.
If you care, encrypt...
On another note. Smart phones are computers that are connected to the Internet; so, wouldn't the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act apply to them (and the use of a stringray to access them)?
An engineer who ran for Congress. http://herbrobinson.us
You win
Stingrays, also known as "cell site simulators" or "IMSI catchers," are invasive cell phone surveillance devices that mimic cell phone towers and send out signals to trick cell phones in the area into transmitting their locations and identifying information. When used to track a suspect's cell phone, they also gather information about the phones of countless bystanders who happen to be nearby.
So, I think the Stingray is used to track who and where, very similar to having a beat cop standing on the corner who recognizes you and notes that you just walked by. All the discussion here about wiretapping is just FUD.
"There is no god but allah" - well, they got it half right.