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green73
06-04-2014, 02:17 PM
A routine request in Florida for public records regarding the use of a surveillance tool known as stingray took an extraordinary turn recently when federal authorities seized the documents before police could release them.

The surprise move by the U.S. Marshals Service stunned the American Civil Liberties Union, which earlier this year filed the public records request with the Sarasota, Florida, police department for information detailing its use of the controversial surveillance tool.

The ACLU had an appointment last Tuesday to review documents pertaining to a case investigated by a Sarasota police detective. But marshals swooped in at the last minute to grab the records, claiming they belong to the U.S. Marshals Service and barring the police from releasing them.

ACLU staff attorney Nathan Freed Wessler called the move “truly extraordinary and beyond the worst transparency violations” the group has seen regarding documents detailing police use of the technology.

“This is consistent with what we’ve seen around the country with federal agencies trying to meddle with public requests for stingray information,” Wessler said, noting that federal authorities have in other cases invoked the Homeland Security Act to prevent the release of such records. “The feds are working very hard to block any release of this information to the public.”

cont.
http://www.wired.com/2014/06/feds-seize-stingray-documents/

XNavyNuke
06-04-2014, 02:19 PM
Much harder to get documents from the Feds than it is a local government body.

XNN

amy31416
06-04-2014, 02:35 PM
Wow.

aGameOfThrones
06-04-2014, 03:27 PM
If you want transparency, you can keep your transparency.

devil21
06-04-2014, 03:47 PM
Aren't cops the ones that always say "If you have nothing to hide, then what are you worried about?"

XNavyNuke
06-05-2014, 07:59 AM
And when LEO use warrantless searches to get convictions it promotes sloppy work. Cases get overturned.

From another "stingray" article in a FL paper today.

http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/local/2014/06/04/unsealed-transcript-illuminates-tpd-stingray-use/9996751/

snippet

At issue are comments Corbitt made as part of a 2008 rape case in which the defendant’s conviction was overturned last year because an appeals court found his arrest was based on a warrantless search.

“There is definitely some fascinating stuff in the transcript,” said Nathan Wessler, the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project lawyer. “It provides a really clear window into just how powerful and invasive this technology really is.”

XNN