Docs Show Police Also Sought (And Obtained) Phone Records For Police Shooting Victim's Girlfriend
from the Sprint-totally-cool-with-indefinite-gag-orders dept
As we recently covered, Minnesota law enforcement tried to snatch victory from the expiring body of a black driver shot by a St. Anthony police officer by immediately asking an uninvolved social media company to turn over information on Philando Castile's girlfriend. The reason for this? The "affiant" swore criminals often used social media services to discuss criminal activities. This was an attempt to mine for dirt that might be used to justify an unjustifiable shoot.
One warrant was served to Facebook, along with an indefinite gag order. Facebook challenged the gag order. Ill-prepared for pushback and having no solid reason to demand the release of Facebook posts and private messages, the warrant was rescinded.
Unfortunately, another company was far more compliant.
Facebook opposed the gag order and, after weeks of discussion between the BCA and a lawyer at Facebook, the warrant was rescinded altogether. Sprint, however, complied with the warrant, and turned over Reynolds’ call records, voicemails, and cell tower information that revealed her location.
Facebook, on one hand, has a policy of notifying users about law enforcement requests for their information. Sprint, apparently, does not. That's why the gag order became a point of contention and resulted in the warrant being withdrawn. Sprint did not challenge the gag order and three days' worth of phone records -- including location info and text messages -- were turned over to law enforcement whose primary interest was finding some reason for Officer Yanez to have shot a compliant Philando Castile.
This highlights a major difference between internet service providers and telcos. Sprint may be in the cellphone business these days, but it's the offshoot of an 118-year-old phone company. The history of telcos' close relationship with law enforcement is long and unseemly. Cell service providers are more than willing to act as proxy Stingrays and provide near real-time location info to law enforcement. Both AT&T and Verizon voluntarily handed over more than the NSA was demanding, paving the way for a successful exploitation of Section 215 until its recent shutdown. AT&T was behind the inadvertently-disclosed "Hemisphere" program, which allowed federal law enforcement agencies to warrantlessly trawl its millions of phone records to search for almost any form of criminal activity.
That Sprint would put up less of a fight than Facebook is disappointing, but it's far from surprising. Similarly unsurprising is law enforcement's kneejerk response to the killing of a citizen by a police officer: disparage the dead as quickly as possible using any means necessary.
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Filed Under: diamond reynolds, philandro castile, privacy, subpoena
Companies: facebook, sprint
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Gangs, Gangs and more Gangs
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Re: Gangs, Gangs and more Gangs
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Re: Re: Gangs, Gangs and more Gangs
I'm not suggesting that they are ideal arbiters of justice but they actually would be better that the current state of the Legal Industrial Complex(LIC)tm.
Bikers may kill you, bomb you and sell your kids meth, but they don't mostly murder people because they are a-scared or slaughter uninvolved people because they can with no consequence, so in that sense they are a big step up from what is happening now.
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Hessian lives matter
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Re: Gangs, Gangs and more Gangs
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Re: Re: Gangs, Gangs and more Gangs
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/poe (better leave that here or there will be hell to pay, will probably have to pay it anyway!)
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/rhetorical
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And in more ways than one. They get both cash and favorable treatment.
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You recently covered this.
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You recently covered this.
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Re: You recently covered this.
Makes as much sense as your comment and has a better tune
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Re: You recently covered this.
They recently covered the Facebook part of this. The Sprint part just came to light.
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Re: You recently covered this.
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Amazing
Clearly it was justified. Your opinion isn't greater than the findings of a jury in the trial. Too bad for you and your agenda!
-C
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Re: Amazing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Massacre
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Re: Amazing
Public opinion runs on a much lower standard of evidence however, allowing the cops to retroactively justify the shooting in the minds of the general public, even though it was completely unjustified at the time.
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Re: Re: Amazing
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If you don't believe that, ask Miosotis Familia about the risks.
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If police feel under threat so much, it's probably because they have a collective knowledge that they constantly provoke the public. Yeah, I'd feel threatened that something might happen and it could be any time if i constantly abused people or was part of a system that does.
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Somehow I have manage to not murder anyone is 45 years.
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What Goes Around...
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Re: What Goes Around...
They need a culture reboot and we need to do more to hold them accountable for their actions.
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I shot a man in reno..
If only cops could be more like the man in black.
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Not by cops of course. Get rid of cops? Bring in gang members? Yeah, that will work.
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I heard it was closer to a million. And the shooters had all voted for Hillary.
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