Following a
January ruling by the US Supreme Court, the FBI has deactivated some 3,000 GPS units that were potentially infringing on the Fourth Amendment. The decision seems to be making waves in the U.S. Justice Department. Andrew Weissmann, FBI General Counsel, says some of the devices have been difficult to retrieve, as the vehicles they were once tracking now move undetected. The FBI has sought temporary permission to reactivate some of the devices to locate and retrieve the hardware. Weissmann says the FBI is also developing new guidelines regarding the legality of its agent's actions -- from the application and use of tracking devices, to the extent a suspect's garbage can be searched before the agent is committing trespass. In short, the FBI is working
really hard not to violate your legal right to privacy. If you happen to find something weird under you car, give 'em a call. They'd probably
like it back.
FBI deactivates about 3,000 GPS tracking devices, loses sight of your car originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Feb 2012 13:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink |
Wall Street Journal |
Email this |
Comments
Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/-C9KBBoZOek/
Finisar Fei Company Fairchild Semiconductor International Fair Isaac Factset Research Systems F5 Networks
No comments:
Post a Comment