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Google ‘Geofence’ Warrants Keep Locking Up Innocent People Who Were In Proximity Of A Crime Scene

Your Constitutional Rights just flew out the window thanks to your smart phone or other GPS device. Guess what, even if you shut off all of your tracking, Law Enforcement can gather information from your cell phone pinging local cell towers as you wander the streets. However, in your behalf, cell tower information requires a warrant. As yet, apparently Google tracking information on your GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and Cellular devices does not require a warrant. It will have to be tested by someone in the courts.

Source: ZeroHedge

Already this type of blanket surveillance warrant, which works as a kind of ‘guilt by proximity’ at the time a crime occurred, has been used by police to arrest what turned out to be innocent bystanders who were suddenly surprised to find themselves prime suspects. It’s perhaps been used only dozens of times in some states, but will likely only increase alongside similar “pre-crime” algorithm technologies. In one instance earlier this year, a Gainesville, Florida man was caught up in a legal nightmare because he merely rode his bicycle unbeknownst near a home burglary at around the same time it happened. 

And it was in 2018 that for the first time a man had been falsely accused and arrested based on a controversial geofence warrant for the crime of murder

The details of that prior alarming case are presented by Wired as follows

So much for that supposed 100% police certainty.

It’s but one example illustrating the likely hundreds of ways geofence warrants could be abused or flat out link completely innocent individuals to a crime. It also strongly suggests old fashioned detective work is increasingly being replaced by dubious technological means.

Here’s more from local reporting at the time on just how police came to arrest the wrong man, all while ensuring him they “knew” he did it:

As it turns out, police did not know “one hundred percent, without a doubt, that his phone was at the shooting scene.”

He had lost his job, his car, and his reputation suffered irreparable damage as a result of the publicity that followed – not to mention having to rot six days in jail when the only “evidence” was Google data. 

The case later fell apart and police finally caught the real killer. 

In early 2020 Molina sued the city police, specific officers that arrested him, as well as the chief of police. He’s also reportedly now suing Google for $1.5 million dollars.

According the the latest reporting in Wired, a couple of recent breakthroughs may help in both Molina’s efforts, and privacy advocates to hope to see the practice end:

Two judges have now denied requests for geofence warrants, citing Fourth Amendment protections and lack of evidence, which privacy groups are hailing as a huge step toward banning geofence warrants altogether. 

Google ‘Geofence’ Warrents Keep Locking Up Innocent People Who Were In Proximity Of A Crime Scene

TD

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