Upon further examination of the warrant, the police officer who signed the warrant was Detective/Sgt. A.B. Wilkins 206 LUPD. The LUPD is not the Lynchburg Police Department nor is there a Sgt. or Detective A.B. Wilkins. It’s the police department under the authority of Liberty University.
Warrants are typically issued by a judge who directs an arresting officer to execute the warrant. No judge appears to have signed the warrant nor is there a judge mentioned, though the warrant does cite the Lynchburg, Virginia courthouse. The warrant also doesn’t appear to be certified by the clerk that it was submitted to the court. Clerks generally stamp documents when received.
The government can read one of the messages with their golden backdoor key. They cannot read the other one encrypted with your secret key. But they believe the contents are the same because you say so.
I see no flaw in this scheme./div>
Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by Cpt Feathersword.
Filed under: Legal lampreys
How is this different from BitTorrent?
Illegitimate warrants?
RawStory says:
/div>Re: Multiple keys to same data
The government can read one of the messages with their golden backdoor key. They cannot read the other one encrypted with your secret key. But they believe the contents are the same because you say so.
I see no flaw in this scheme./div>
Techdirt has not posted any stories submitted by Cpt Feathersword.
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