Tag Archives: Stingray

The StingRay Is Exactly Why the 4th Amendment Was Written, by Olivia Donaldson

Imagine you are in the middle of your typical day-to-day activities. Maybe you are driving, spending time with family, or working. If you are like most people, your phone is at your side on a daily basis. Little do you know that, at any time, police and law enforcement could be looking at information stored on your phone. You haven’t done anything wrong. You haven’t been asked for permission. You aren’t suspected of any crime.The StingRay

Police have the power to collect your location along with the numbers of your incoming and outgoing calls and intercept the content of call and text communication. They can do all of this without you ever knowing about it.

At least 68 agencies in 23 different states own StingRays.

How? They use a shoebox-sized device called a StingRay. This device (also called an IMSI catcher) mimics cell phone towers, prompting all the phones in the area to connect to it even if the phones aren’t in use.

The police use StingRays to track down and implicate perpetrators of mainly domestic crimes. The devices can be mounted in vehicles, drones, helicopters, and airplanes, allowing police to gain highly specific information on the location of any particular phone, down to a particular apartment complex or hotel room.

Quietly, StingRay use is growing throughout local and federal law enforcement with little to no oversight. The ACLU has discovered that at least 68 agencies in 23 different states own StingRays, but says that this “dramatically underrepresents the actual use of StingRays by law enforcement agencies nationwide.”

The Violation

Information from potentially thousands of phones is being collected every time a StingRay is used. Signals are sent into the homes, bags, and pockets of innocent individuals. The Electronic Frontier Foundation likens this to the Pre-Revolutionary War practice of soldiers going door-to-door, searching without suspicion.

To continue reading: The StingRay Is Exactly Why the 4th Amendment Was Written

He Said That? 3/16/15

From Joe Simitian, a Santa Clara, California, county supervisor:

“So, just to be clear, we are being asked to spend $500,000 of taxpayers’ money and $42,000 a year thereafter for a product for the name brand which we are not sure of, a product we have not seen, a demonstration we don’t have, and we have a nondisclosure requirement as a precondition. You want us to vote and spend money,” he continued, but “you can’t tell us more about it.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/16/business/a-police-gadget-tracks-phones-shhh-its-secret.html?utm_source=digg&utm_medium=email&_r=2

The expenditures in question are for a device, called the Stingray, that would allow the Santa Clara Sheriff’s department to track cellphones. Beyond that, a nondisclosure agreement signed with the company that makes the Stingray, the Harris Corporation, requires users not to disclose anything about the device, not even to the politicians who must approve paying for it. For more details about this super-secret gizmo, and its disturbing civil liberties implications, the story is linked above and here: Super-Secret Gizmo.