Showing posts with label Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tower. Show all posts

Friday, December 6, 2013

Warrantless Cellphone ‘Tower Dumps’ Becoming Go-To Tool For Law Enforcement


from the just-get-it-all,-you-never-know-when-you’ll-need-it dept


Tim Cushing
Tech Dirt
December 6, 2013


Our founding fathers understood the problems with overly-broad warrants and the dangers posed by unreasonable searches and seizures. These were the sort of things kings did because the populace had no way to check that power. So, when they decided the US wouldn’t be run like a patriarchal state, they built in protections for the new nation’s inhabitants.


But they also understood that these checks on government power might be inconvenient for law enforcement and security agencies, which is why they built in extensive waivers and exceptions that would allow these entities to bypass the limits in order to pursue criminals, terrorists and whistleblowers. As the wording clearly states in the Bill of Rights, the people are guaranteed certain protections “unless, you know, we’re trying to catch bad guys.”


It’s true.** Our founding fathers would be amazed to observe the ruckus being raised by so-called “defenders” of rights in the wake of the NSA leaks or the rising amount of evidence showing government agencies are willing to exploit every loophole (mainly the Third Party Doctrine) to seize tons of data completely unrelated to the investigations at hand.


**It absolutely f**king isn’t.


Jess Remington at Reason points out another of these “non-events” being carried out under the name of law enforcement.


Police officers in Richland County, South Carolina are currently defending the use of a controversial investigation method that grants their departments access to thousands of cell phone users’ data in the search for criminals.


The technique, in which law enforcement officials rely on what are known as “tower dumps,” is an increasingly common policing tactic in local departments across the country. Following a crime, law enforcement officials locate nearby cell towers and request all of the call, text, and data transmissions that occurred during the crime from the tower’s provider. The majority of the data collected belongs to individuals with no connection to the crime.



How does one’s info end up being swept up in a tower dump? Does one have a cellphone with a signal? Yeah, that’s how. Checking your email? Surfing the web? Making a call? Sending a text message? It all goes in the dump. And South Carolina cops are helping themselves to all of this data because, hey, it makes capturing bad guys a little easier. (CAUTION: AUTOPLAY IN EFFECT)


The Richland County Sheriff’s Department used Tower Dumps during the investigation into a string of car breakins, where weapons and computers were stolen. They combined the Tower Dump information with DNA evidence and in 2011 arrested Phillip Tate on three counts of “breaking and entering a motor vehicle” and one count of “larceny.”


“He did break and enter into both of those vehicles, one of them being the vehicle of Sheriff Lott. It was parked at his house,” said Fifth Circuit Solicitor Joanna McDuffy in court. “It was his sheriff department issued vehicle. Weapons were taken from that vehicle your honor.”


Search warrants we found say Richland Sheriff’s investigators requested dumps on two cell phone towers during their investigation.



Cops seeking to use these tower dumps just can’t call up the provider and ask for them. But neither do they have to jump through the probable cause hoops a warrant entails. All they need is a court order, which is considerably easier to obtain than a warrant, thanks to the (somewhat ironically-named) Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986.


The Richland PD is just one of several law enforcement entities making frequent use of these untargeted, unminimized data dumps. And the numbers keep increasing every year.


In 2011, AT&T and Verizon received 1.3 million requests for cell phone data (many of which were tower dumps) and filled more than 500,000 of them. Verizon estimates that over the last 5 years, law enforcement’s tower dump requests have increased by 15% annually. T-Mobile reported increases of approximately 12%-16%.



Thanks to the ease of obtaining tower dumps, it’s becoming a go-to tool for law enforcement. Not only can they collect these without needing to show probable cause, they’re also under no obligation to inform any of the millions of unrelated cellphone customers whose information they’ve obtained that they’ve swept up their data.


Oddly enough, someone from the counterterrorism community is being the voice of reason in all this.


“In recognizing that it’s not just the CIA or FBI tracking a terrorist that may have flown over here, this is local law enforcement. As citizens, we sort of have a question: how often is this happening?” said Keith Pounds, president of counterrorism consulting firm Countercon…


He supports Tower Dumps, but only if a search warrant is signed, the data is purged after an investigation is complete and law enforcement notify subscribers included in the database.


“Inform us,” Pounds said. “Or at least those couple of hundred or couple of thousand people, innocent people, inform them that hey we acquired your information for this particular crime. We’re going to purge the data and get rid of it.”



This obviously isn’t being implemented anywhere at the moment, or we would have heard of it. Law enforcement agencies are understandably in no hurry to tell innocent citizens that they’re sweeping up their data in order to sift through it for potential signs of wrongdoing. They seem to be taking their cues from our nation’s intelligence agencies, which only begrudgingly inform the public about their data hauls, and then only after former employees splash them all over the front pages of newspapers.


Making this worse (especially for South Carolina residents) is that local laws regarding this data tie retention rates to whether the suspect apprehended using tower dumps is convicted or not.


South Carolina evidence control laws say if a suspect is convicted or pleads guilty, police could keep everything they get from a Tower Dump for up to seven years.



So, your data’s stay in SC police databases isn’t subject to any minimization by process of elimination. It isn’t even purged once a guilty verdict (or entered plea) is obtained. Instead, SC law enforcement has nearly a decade (or longer — no mention of what happens if the suspect is found not guilty) to play connect-the-dots with data on non-criminals.


Even worse, this is a state that at least has some sort of policy in place to deal with this data. Most states have very little in the way of guidelines or privacy protection. Usually, these are developed post-public uproar. And if no one has to inform the public about the gathering of their data, this delays the (almost inevitable) exposure of these practices and increases the chances of abuse.


This article was posted: Friday, December 6, 2013 at 11:55 am


Tags: big brother, domestic spying, nsa









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Warrantless Cellphone ‘Tower Dumps’ Becoming Go-To Tool For Law Enforcement

Monday, November 25, 2013

How many shooters up in that tower?

We are told that on August 1, 1966, one Charles J. Whitman, 25, shot over 40 people, killing 14, from the 28th floor observation deck of the Administration Building of the University of Texas at Austin.

However, going back to the original witnesses, it sounds like there were other shooters:


articles.latimes.com…
He was firing so fast and so often, with so many puffs of smoke coming from different angles on the observation deck, that many on the ground believed there were two or three snipers.


www.deekmagazine.com…
Whitman moved around the observation deck as he continued to shoot, leading witnesses to think there were multiple snipers.


www.youtube.com…
22:35 mark
PO Houston McCoy: I looked up there on the north end there’s the one shot, then right in the middle there’s a shot, then on the south end there was a shot.
Voice Over: …. (The sniper was)shooting from east, west, north, and south. He(the gunman) gave the impression that there was more than one sniper.
McCoy: I thought there was at least three of them right there, you know.


Article from Austin-American Statesman, Aug 2, 1966
It was so deadly and efficient police officers were not convinced until the moment of Whitman’s death there were not two snipers firing at human targets below.


www.westtexasscoutinghistory.net…
Houston McCoy: “On remaining at the northeast corner, I had drawn and cocked my .38 revolver, being leery of another possible sniper.”


www.westtexasscoutinghistory.net…
Waco Tribune-Herald April 23, 1967
From the volume of fire, police believed several people were up there….


www.westtexasscoutinghistory.net…
Austin Police Chief Bob Miles:
“The first report didn’t really strike a note; it just said something about invetigating someone shooting from the tower. But the next report, when I started paying attention, said there appeared to be two of them shooting from the tower.”
Miles said police thought there were two snipers until an officer was sent up to circle the tower in a helicopter….


www.youtube.com…
PO Jerry Day: 2:12 mark
“There were shots coming from everywhere. … It looked like a gang of people up there.”


The Sniper in the Tower, Gary Lavergne, pg171
“The sniper appeared to be everywhere and victims seemed to be falling on both the Drag and the South Mall at the same time.”


————–


If these early reports are true, and they usually are, then the Texas Tower Sniper incident is yet another example of the false-flag event, designed to force unpopular political change in its aftermath, in this case calls for gun control and the creation of militarized police SWAT units, which today have come to full, bitter fruition.


/




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In General Conspiracies



How many shooters up in that tower?

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Freedom tower might not be the nation’s tallest building


The Freedom Tower is at the mercy of a committee of architects who may decide the tower is NOT the nation’s tallest building.


At odds is a design change involving the towers 408 foot needle at the top of the building.


If the change is made the building won’t be listed at 1776 feet, but 1,368 feet.


That would ruin not only the tallest building label but the patriotic tie that comes with the 1776 number.


There is one other thing to note that has some in the process crying foul.


The building that would re-ascend to that tallest spot is the Willis Towers in Chicago (old Sears bldg) and the committee making the decision is based there as well.


One committee member of the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat said “most of the time, these decisions are not so controversial.”


The decision is scheduled to be made next week. For more on the discussion and how the experts are looking into things, click here.





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Freedom tower might not be the nation’s tallest building