Is There A Defense Of Pretexting?
from the defending-the-indefensible dept
Remember the HP pretexting scandal? While charges had already been filed against company insiders, up until yesterday, the actual firm that did the pretexting had yet to have charges brought upon it. Now the feds have thrown the book at private investigator Bryan Wagner for gaining access to a reporter's phone records using the controversial method. In addition to the direct legal action, there have been several calls by politicians to strengthen and clarify laws that would ban pretexting. Similar proposals have been made in Canada, prompting a Canadian private investigator to write a blog post defending the practice (via The Daily Caveat). The PI's argument is that there are plenty of legitimate uses of the practice, particularly in more grave situations, such as investigating a kidnapping or collecting from a deadbeat. He argues, more broadly, that deception is a key part of all law enforcement, both public and private, and that pretexting is just a one form of deception. Of course, it's easy to argue by making an appeal to emotion, as he does by bringing up kidnapping. Then again, it seems like much of the outrage surrounding the HP case came from revulsion over spying on a reporter, as opposed to the specific tactic that was used. Obviously, the law needs to protect people from having their privacy pried into and abused, but it's easy to imagine politicians going too far in their zeal to be seen as champions of a popular issue.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Politicians try
As has been stated in I don't even want to count how many other Techdirt articles, again politicians will probably jump on it to act like they are doing something, rather than actually consider the consequences of their actions.
But hey, isn't America famous for that to a large extent anyways?
*grumbles*
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If the cops (you know, the actual law) want your phone records, they can get them. Via warrant or subpoena or whatever. They don't go around faking your identity to find out who you called, because they don't have to. It's the same result, but the process is actually legal, with paper trials and judicial oversight.
PIs have none of that, so they resort to this "pretexting" crap. Once they start breaking the law in the course of investigating a corporate leak that isn't even a crime, they're crossing the line to vigilante justice, and I'm not OK with that. I hope they nail the guy to wall, if just to send the message to corporate America that this is not OK to do.
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this uncharming man
Deception is only necessary where the investigator lacks the charm, authority or power to correctly obtain access or information.
Notice how the author skews the object from public law enforcement (who do have the authority and power) to private investigations (which do not).
I cannot speak for the USA but criminal offences of fraud at English Law include obtaining property by deception, obtaining services by deception and obtaining a pecuniary advantage by deception. If information is to be regarded as property then this clearly applies.
In practice just about everything in modern life involves some element of deception whether it be a craftily worded contract or subtly misleading advertising.
I mention charm. This is a lost art. I'm sure everyone remembers the scene in "All the Presidents men" where Woodward and Bernstein (Hoffman and Redford) play a whole bunch of ruses that approach deception but are never actually lying. The elegance of their investigation is all about what they *do not* say rather than anything false that they venture.
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Uh no.
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Pretexting Kerfluffle
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Cool! I'm going to start taxing. My first tax will be on morons. Kevin D. Bousquet, I tax thee one million dollars! Pay up, or my private police force will use pretexting to drain your bank account.
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Pretext Privacy & Private Investigators
I appreciate and respect all the comments both positive and/or negative.
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He argues, more broadly, that deception is a key part of all law enforcement,
The problem is that none of HP's board of directors, their attorneys, nor any private investigators they may have hired qualify as "law enforcement".
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Pretext Privacy & Private Investigators
There are just some things Police don't do. They don't follow people on insurance fraud cases, they don't investigate the underground economy. They don't serve documents.
So that means there is a percentage of crime out there that is investigated by the private sector and pretext can't be used.
I am all for the police handling everything if it was possible. It's just an important method. I am just against no pretext at all. It should be regulated with exceptions.
Just like my example of Dog The Bounty Hunter. He is a private sector company using what will be illegal pretext to catch his bad guys.
I have to bug out of this blog now as I have a few others to respond to. You are welcome to post comments bad or good at the blog I won't delete them. I will delete name calling however.
Thanks everyone...
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Rush job lawmaking
Otherwise there is a huge hole
Yeah pretexting can be bad, but to outlaw it altogether due to one case and a lot of media attention is going a bit far - the speed this bill has been drawn up would hint towards reactionary lawmaking, "Its to protect the kids" type syndrome, and this never makes for the most well thought out laws
Charms great if you have enough of it to get all the information required fast enough, but sometimes a barefaced lie is required to get to the truth quickly - a necessary evil.
To compare, guns are quite often used to hurt people, commit crimes, used by law enforcement and the general public - yet every time someone mentions banning them as criminals make use of them there is an outcry. I'm not particularly fond of firearms but at least be consistent, pretexting is a tool which can hurt people criminally (not usually as badly as a bullet in the face) but can also be used against criminals
I think this law would severely hamper a lot of crime detection that takes place outside the sphere of law enforcement and needs at least a major rethink, its needs to focus less on method and more on intent
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Crime detection outside the sphere of law enforcement? You mean vigilante justice? Yeah, I think that's exactly what the proposed legislation is trying to prevent.
The bottom line is, if it's illegal for you to steal something from someone, pretending you're an authority figure to demand it from them should be illegal too. Impersonating someone for the purposes of illegally obtaining confidential materials should absolutely be illegal. Do all forms of pretexting (ie, lying) fall into that? Probably not. But those that do should be illegal.
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Re:
I don't beleive this issue is at all as cut and dry as "cop good - others bad" (apart from the fact that the law from what I have been able to find does not make any distinction for officers of the law anyway)
All I'm saying is it needs a lot more thought than taking one famous case where it was used for bad and saying "it's all bad then"
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Pretexting
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