Calgary Police Cellphone Surveillance Device Must Remain Top Secret, Judge Rules (www.cbc.ca)
Freshly Exhumed writes from a report via CBC.ca: To protect police investigative techniques that may or may not have been used in a Calgary Police Service investigation, their controversial cellphone surveillance device will remain so secretive not even the make and model can be released to the public, according to a court ruling released Monday. The MDI (Mobile Device Identifier) technology -- colloquially called a StingRay after Harris Corporation's IMSI device, which mimics cell towers and intercepts data from nearby phones -- is controversial in part because in at least one Canadian case, prosecutors have taken watered down plea deals rather than disclose information related to the device.
They are such fascists. Why can't they be more enlightened like us Americans?
that's where the lawyer makes it worth the fee.
Just-a Trued'hoax.
So if I'm in law enforcement in Canada, I could say I have a magic device that detects corruption, point fingers, and then people just have to deal with it?
Meanwhile in the USA people are able to scrutinize breathalyzers and challenge their validity in court?
I'd say wtf are you doing Canada?
I don't see how someone can receive a fair trial if the the mechanism used to collect evidence is secret. The prosecution can only claim to have phone records, there is no way for the defense to question their accuracy, or whether the evidence could be spoofed.
The only reason to keep the operation of stingrays secret is of there is some way to spoof them. In that case how can you be sure that there aren't already spoofing systems in the wild?
As a Juror I would ignore any "secret" evidence.
gonna be so fucking jealous of this.
they should have nothing to worry about and nothing to hide.
hey, that's what they (LEOs) say to us, all the time!
seems there is one law for me, and another for thee.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
The reason the cops are withdrawing charges is because they don't want to allow the defence to make them provide evidence that exposes the stingrays.
Canadian law doesn't allow secret evidence. Even military secrets have to be entered into evidence, although that requires judges and lawyers with high levels of clearance.
davecb@spamcop.net
Alberta isn't like the rest of Canada. They're more like Texan wannabes with Cowboy hats and boots. Fascist stuff like this is par for the course. Lake Louise is nice though. Just don't step out of line.
Raise money for the brave soul(s) who break into the dept and steal the damn thing.
Stretch Goals for putting the user manual on the web.
I think some engineering students at UC should make a few cell phone listening devices and do a demonstration in front of the Police station: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/receiving-decoding-decrypting-gsm-signals-rtl-sdr/
Here we have a use of juridical authority so undividedly popular, so obviously righteous, so manifestly in the public interest, that it can only be done in utter secrecy.
You mean were not even allowed to mention it was a StingRay II System Kit with AmberJack-W, oops!
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Canada cannot simply let this slide without retribution the way people in the United States have done. It is a clear and concise assault on the basic rights and freedoms of Canadians, and on the entire transparency of the justice system. Allowing "Secret evidence" that cannot be contested is what places like North Korea, China and the USA do to their peasants, and has no use nor goal other than the abuses which it allows.
Remove that judge and the the Law Enforcement offices which pushed for this travesty, by force if you have to.
Then how can a judge declare them "so secretive not even the make and model can be released"?
What does "secret" mean in this case? There is no evidence, just a statement to the jury, "Trust us". Or, as you suggest, does it requires a certain calibre of judge and lawyer to hear the case?
Is there anyone left who doesn't realize that Cellphones at the hardware level are designed as surveillance and tracking devices? If you are doing anything you think the government might not like, you'd best rid yourself of these trackers. Put it in a lead box at the least.
I think some engineering students at UC should make a few cell phone listening devices
Cell phone technology isn't very secure per se. For big brains used to work on radio devices, building a listening system wouldn't be that much difficult.
The only way to be sure that your communication remains secure, is to use end-to-end encryption.
The only way to keep some level of anonymity is to add onion routing to the equations (but due to high latency, you're then limited to texting).
and do a demonstration in front of the Police station: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/receiv...
...the main problem is that the frequencies used by smartphone aren't public (unlike your good old friend 2.4 Ghz used by WiFi, Bluetooth, wireless USB and just near everything else under the sun).
These frequencies are heavily regulated, and the mere fact that you start playing around might be asking for trouble.
(Well at least if you're only passively listening, there's less chances of being caught, and in practice you can't cause any cell network disruption).
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
The Judge said the information is sealed (cannot be disclosed to the public), and that he wants to see it. The crown can either pony up, or drop the case.
davecb@spamcop.net
I know there are a few for Android, but what about those silly Apple users? Do they have any way to detect them?
Why do people forget this?