Daily Archives: April 23, 2016

CA1: Prior arrest warrant and public records put subject of arrest warrant at address; sufficient under Payton

The police had good reason under Payton to believe that a man wanted in an arrest warrant would be found at defendant’s house: An outstanding arrest warrant listed that address, postal records showed he got mail there, and other public … Continue reading

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NJ: Walking up to police at 1:30 am and reaching for back pocket justified frisk

Defendant walked up to officers at 1:30 am in a high crime area, did not acknowledge their words to him, and moved his hand to his back pocket as he got closer. They frisked him, finding only a baggie of … Continue reading

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Microsoft reports child porn in OneDrive accounts

Microsoft found child pornography in a folder saved by defendant on its cloud service, and it reported it to NCMEC. Law enforcement was afraid to contact him directly because he might delete images, so they found he was on probation … Continue reading

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eff.org: EFF and ACLU Expose Government’s Secret Stingray Use in Wisconsin Case

eff.org: EFF and ACLU Expose Government’s Secret Stingray Use in Wisconsin Case: Thanks to EFF and the ACLU, the government has finally admitted it secretly used a Stingray to locate a defendant in a Wisconsin criminal case, United States v. … Continue reading

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The Atlantic: How License-Plate Readers Have Helped Police and Lenders Target the Poor

The Atlantic: How License-Plate Readers Have Helped Police and Lenders Target the Poor by Kevah Waddell: Law enforcement can access privately-collected location information about cars—and some low-income neighborhoods have faced extra scrutiny.

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NYTImes: U.S. Opens Another iPhone, This Time With the Keycode

NYTImes: U.S. Opens Another iPhone, This Time With the Keycode by Eric Lichtblau: The Justice Department said Friday night that it had gained access on its own to a locked iPhone used by a Brooklyn drug dealer, the second time … Continue reading

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Newsweek: How the FBI Uses Facial Recognition Technology to Fight Crime

Newsweek: How the FBI Uses Facial Recognition Technology to Fight Crime by Eric Markowitz: Today, the FBI’s digital catalog of searchable ‘face photos’ has ballooned to some 548 million pictures, the largest database of faces in history. It includes criminal … Continue reading

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NYTimes: F.B.I. Director Suggests Bill for iPhone Hacking Topped $1.3 Million

NYTimes: F.B.I. Director Suggests Bill for iPhone Hacking Topped $1.3 Million by Eric Lichtblau and Katie Benner: The director of the F.B.I. suggested Thursday that his agency paid at least $1.3 million to an undisclosed group to help hack into … Continue reading

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WSJ: Prosecutors Say Fitbit Device Exposed Fibbing in Rape Case

WSJ: Prosecutors Say Fitbit Device Exposed Fibbing in Rape Case by Jacob Gershman: Data has always been a double-edged sword. The convenience, efficiency and knowledge on one side and privacy fears, surveillance concerns and cybercrime on the other. The same … Continue reading

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IA: Guilty plea by a person later proved innocent bars civil action for false arrest

“In this case, we consider whether a defendant who has pled guilty to a criminal offense but later successfully challenged the validity of the plea may qualify as a “wrongfully imprisoned person” under Iowa Code section 663A.1 (2015).” While the … Continue reading

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