CA4: Even GPS failed to prove a conspiracy, thereby requiring a wiretap

Even GPS tracking is not the end all be all of criminal investigation. GPS was shown to be an inadequate technique to tie together a conspiracy in needing a wiretap. United States v. Eccleston, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 13376 (4th Cir. July 31, 2015):

In exhaustive fashion, [the government] set forth the techniques that had been used up to that point. Those techniques included confidential informants, undercover agents, surveillance, trash searches, interviews, search warrants, telephone records, reverse buys, GPS trackers, and financial and public records. The affiants then explained that despite the information they had been able to gain from these traditional sources, they believed that those sources, standing alone, were insufficient to achieve the goals of the investigation and prove the extent of the conspiracy. For example, they explained that confidential informants were unable to identify the higher-ups of the conspiracy. The traditional sources also failed to uncover the conspiracy’s cocaine source and the extent to which the coconspirators distributed it for resale.

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