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Police Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool

B

BrnCow

This article lays out some of the cell phone tracking going on and the training manual shows how they do it. You can d/l the manual. Just click on the pdf version and save it to your puter...

WASHINGTON — Law enforcement tracking of cellphones, once the province mainly of federal agents, has become a powerful and widely used surveillance tool for local police officials, with hundreds of departments, large and small, often using it aggressively with little or no court oversight, documents show. Enlarge This Image
SURVEILLANCE-articleInline.jpg

Raymond McCrea Jones for The New York Times

A GPS tracker. The Supreme Court recently ruled that such a device placed on a suspect's car was an unreasonable search.




The practice has become big business for cellphone companies, too, with a handful of carriers marketing a catalog of “surveillance fees” to police departments to determine a suspect’s location, trace phone calls and texts or provide other services. Some departments log dozens of traces a month for both emergencies and routine investigations.




With cellphones ubiquitous, the police call phone tracing a valuable weapon in emergencies like child abductions and suicide calls and investigations in drug cases and murders. One police training manual describes cellphones as “the virtual biographer of our daily activities,” providing a hunting ground for learning contacts and travels.


But civil liberties advocates say the wider use of cell tracking raises legal and constitutional questions, particularly when the police act without judicial orders. While many departments require warrants to use phone tracking in nonemergencies, others claim broad discretion to get the records on their own, according to 5,500 pages of internal records obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union from 205 police departments nationwide.


The internal documents, which were provided to The New York Times, open a window into a cloak-and-dagger practice that police officials are wary about discussing publicly. While cell tracking by local police departments has received some limited public attention in the last few years, the A.C.L.U. documents show that the practice is in much wider use — with far looser safeguards — than officials have previously acknowledged.


The issue has taken on new legal urgency in light of a Supreme Court ruling in January finding that a Global Positioning System tracking device placed on a drug suspect’s car violated his Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches. While the ruling did not directly involve cellphones — many of which also include GPS locators — it raised questions about the standards for cellphone tracking, lawyers say.


The police records show many departments struggling to understand and abide by the legal complexities of cellphone tracking, even as they work to exploit the technology.
In cities in Nevada, North Carolina and other states, police departments have gotten wireless carriers to track cellphone signals back to cell towers as part of nonemergency investigations to identify all the callers using a particular tower, records show.


In California, state prosecutors advised local police departments on ways to get carriers to “clone” a phone and download text messages while it is turned off.
In Ogden, Utah, when the Sheriff’s Department wants information on a cellphone, it leaves it up to the carrier to determine what the sheriff must provide. “Some companies ask that when we have time to do so, we obtain court approval for the tracking request,” the Sheriff’s Department said in a written response to the A.C.L.U.


And in Arizona, even small police departments found cell surveillance so valuable that they acquired their own tracking equipment to avoid the time and expense of having the phone companies carry out the operations for them. The police in the town of Gilbert, for one, spent $244,000 on such equipment.
Cell carriers, staffed with special law enforcement liaison teams, charge police departments from a few hundred dollars for locating a phone to more than $2,200 for a full-scale wiretap of a suspect, records show.


Most of the police departments cited in the records did not return calls seeking comment. But other law enforcement officials said the legal questions were outweighed by real-life benefits.


The police in Grand Rapids, Mich., for instance, used a cell locator in February to find a stabbing victim who was in a basement hiding from his attacker.


“It’s pretty valuable, simply because there are so many people who have cellphones,” said Roxann Ryan, a criminal analyst with Iowa’s state intelligence branch. “We find people,” she said, “and it saves lives.”



Page 2

Many departments try to keep cell tracking secret, the documents show, because of possible backlash from the public and legal problems. Although there is no evidence that the police have listened to phone calls without warrants, some defense lawyers have challenged other kinds of evidence gained through warrantless cell tracking.


“Do not mention to the public or the media the use of cellphone technology or equipment used to locate the targeted subject,” the Iowa City Police Department warned officers in one training manual. It should also be kept out of police reports, it advised.

In Nevada, a training manual warned officers that using cell tracing to locate someone without a warrant “IS ONLY AUTHORIZED FOR LIFE-THREATENING EMERGENCIES!!” The practice, it said, had been “misused” in some standard investigations to collect information the police did not have the authority to collect.


“Some cell carriers have been complying with such requests, but they cannot be expected to continue to do so as it is outside the scope of the law,” the advisory said. “Continued misuse by law enforcement agencies will undoubtedly backfire.”
Another training manual prepared by California prosecutors in 2010 advises police officials on “how to get the good stuff” using cell technology.


The presentation said that since the Supreme Court first ruled on wiretapping law in 1928 in a Prohibition-era case involving a bootlegger, “subtler and more far-reaching means of invading privacy have become available to the government.”
Technological breakthroughs, it continued, have made it possible for the government “to obtain disclosure in court of what is whispered in the closet.”
In interviews, lawyers and law enforcement officials agreed that there was uncertainty over what information the police are entitled to get legally from cell companies, what standards of evidence they must meet and when courts must get involved.


A number of judges have come to conflicting decisions in balancing cellphone users’ constitutional privacy rights with law enforcement’s need for information.


In a 2010 ruling, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in Philadelphia, said a judge could require the authorities to obtain a warrant based on probable cause before demanding cellphone records or location information from a provider. (A similar case from Texas is pending in the Fifth Circuit.)


“It’s terribly confusing, and it’s understandable, when even the federal courts can’t agree,” said Michael Sussman, a Washington lawyer who represents cell carriers. The carriers “push back a lot” when the police urgently seek out cell locations or other information in what are purported to be life-or-death situations, he said. “Not every emergency is really an emergency.”


Congress and about a dozen states are considering legislative proposals to tighten restrictions on the use of cell tracking.
While cell tracing allows the police to get records and locations of users, the A.C.L.U. documents give no indication that departments have conducted actual wiretapping operations — listening to phone calls — without court warrants required under federal law.


Much of the debate over phone surveillance in recent years has focused on the federal government and counterterrorism operations, particularly a once-secret program authorized by President George W. Bush after the Sept. 11 attacks. It allowed the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on phone calls of terrorism suspects and monitor huge amounts of phone and e-mail traffic without court-approved intelligence warrants.


Clashes over the program’s legality led Congress to broaden the government’s eavesdropping powers in 2008. As part of the law, the Bush administration insisted that phone companies helping in the program be given immunity against lawsuits.


Since then, the wide use of cell surveillance has seeped down to even small, rural police departments in investigations unrelated to national security.


“It’s become run of the mill,” said Catherine Crump, an A.C.L.U. lawyer who coordinated the group’s gathering of police records. “And the advances in technology are rapidly outpacing the state of the law.”

Training Materials for Tracking Cellphones

Cell phone tracking training manual for police - 189 pages pdf file link- same as above:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/01/u....html?pagewanted=2&_r=2&ei=5065&partner=MYWAY
 

Yes4Prop215

Active member
Veteran
i tell everybody i know i fucking HATE PHONES...dont talk to me on phones about illegal shit. and yet some of them still dont have a clue, talking shop on the same phone they call their bank and their wives with...

i have researched several big drug cases here in norcal and cell phones were the #1 evidence against people....some guys had thousands of text messages in their phone subpeonas that showed them committing dozens of felony conspiracy to distribute...

another friend had NO POT, NO MONEY, and yet a snitch and his cell phone might lead to a prison sentence this year...

best way to discuss illegal shit is through burner emails.....create a joint email account that both you and your friend can access, and leave incriminating messages in the draft, DONT SEND THEM, and then edit and delete draft when read..
 

TheFlyinHaWyn!

Active member
best way to discuss illegal shit is through burner emails.....create a joint email account that both you and your friend can access, and leave incriminating messages in the draft, DONT SEND THEM, and then edit and delete draft when read..


nice bro, that sounds about as good a way as any, and shit you can even do it from your phone :D
 

paper thorn

Active member
Veteran
i tell everybody i know i fucking HATE PHONES...dont talk to me on phones about illegal shit. and yet some of them still dont have a clue, talking shop on the same phone they call their bank and their wives with...

i have researched several big drug cases here in norcal and cell phones were the #1 evidence against people....some guys had thousands of text messages in their phone subpeonas that showed them committing dozens of felony conspiracy to distribute...

another friend had NO POT, NO MONEY, and yet a snitch and his cell phone might lead to a prison sentence this year...

best way to discuss illegal shit is through burner emails.....create a joint email account that both you and your friend can access, and leave incriminating messages in the draft, DONT SEND THEM, and then edit and delete draft when read..
Why don't i think of stuff like that?
Big props to you for passing that on.
 

toxic_jon

New member
Yeah man, this war on citizens is for real!

Everything about it doesn't make any sense to me, some people do all there biz over there phone via talk and text. hypothetically if the FBI/DEA looks at a coke addicts texts and link them to his dealer, they could look at the coke dealers texts and find all his contacts. could they bust the dealers patrons?
 

Growcephus

Member
Veteran
Everything about it doesn't make any sense to me, some people do all there biz over there phone via talk and text. hypothetically if the FBI/DEA looks at a coke addicts texts and link them to his dealer, they could look at the coke dealers texts and find all his contacts. could they bust the dealers patrons?

Contacts can be used to create a list of "persons of interest".

Surveillance can confirm or deny whether they truly are "of interest".

If they ARE of interest, the individual will be placed under further scrutiny, which could lead to enough evidence to arrest for whatever charge.

A cell phone is a transmitter and receiver with a computer chip in it that works off of a program, which means that it can be sent programs that can be executed without the owners knowledge. This could be bad, for obvious reasons.

Anything that transmits can be located through triangulation, which is relatively easy due to the multiple cell towers scattered all over the place. Even without using the towers, mobile equipment can be used to accomplish the same goal. This is not good for privacy, and while EXACT locations are difficult to achieve, the right AREA is not, and most of the time, that's all it takes.

Cell phones are not an ideal form of communication for those that demand privacy, as there is far too much data created and stored on the phone itself, and also outside of the owners span of control. Not only is data available from the phone, but much of that data is transmitted and stored on the providers' computer servers. This data, of course, can be turned over to anyone with the proper credentials.....or the right amount of cash.

Bottom line: if you want to maintain privacy and MUST use a cell phone, use a designated "dirty" phone that can't be traced directly to you, don't store data you wouldn't want compromised on the phone (numbers/contacts/etc), and whenever you are not ACTIVELY communicating with someone on the phone, remove the power source.

Edit: And use the damn security feature that allows you to designate a PIN number and requires that PIN number before the phone can be used. No brainer, but you'd be surprised how many folks would have been saved from jealous spouses / LEO's if they did that one simple thing.

Inconvenient?

Certainly.

However, so is maintaining privacy these days.
 

johnipedestran

1%
Veteran
interesting article does not change a thing about the way I live.....I have my daily phone that is completely legit.

then I got another phone that is cash only...throw away. and it is kept turned off the except when I need it.

peace
jip
 

Chronage

Scholastic Warrior
Soon the people with tin foil hats will be saying " I told you so ". Sometimes mankind is just far to depressing to read about.
 
Great post groceoupsh. I always laugh when I here someone on IC mention the word triangulation, it reminds me of that scenes from pineapple express...

"They can't triangulate that shlt, you're crazy"


"So get this, we triangulated there location...."

It's so true.

and it is kept turned off the except when I need it.

peace
jip

All phones made after a certain date must have encoded a feature that allows them to be remotely turned on, so you need to remove the battery.
 

ScrubNinja

Grow like nobody is watching
Veteran
One approach is to use the phone's "smartness" to your own advantage. Programs like Tasker (for Android phones) will automate just about any process the phone is capable of. By no means a silver bullet, but it could help.

For example if you had a second house as your grow house, you can have it automatically turn off GPS, and disable all forms of wireless/cell communication any time you're in that general area. Nothing is getting sent to or from a phone in this state, to my knowledge. I know for sure that even Google (the company behind the Android os) can't reach it, so I'm interested in your last statement Leroy. Got any info on that?

Another possibility is to have Tasker disable the security lock when you're at home, but enable it any time you leave. You can also automate processes like deleting contents of folders regularly.

I'm pretty sure you could also set up a self destruct option too. Maybe something like if you shake the crap out of it for X continuous seconds, have it wipe the SD card and then run whatever command it needs to toast the OS.

You can also have it encrypt files automatically. You can in fact encrypt your whole phone with the latest android versions, no Tasker required, but I'm just not that hardcore to try it, lol.

It's all pretty open to possibilities and endless combinations. Sure, a lot of these suggestions are a pretty thin defense in a court, but I write it mainly for small guys like me who basically just don't want to catch heat in a random traffic stop because they forgot to delete some weed pics or something. And people who have a LOT of time to learn how to program all that!

The bigger picture is pretty worrying for me though.
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
they been tracking cell phones for a while now. they busted a ring crossing the boarder from maine to canada and back illegally with drugs years ago. using their phones to track em.
 
Scrub

Scrub

I hear your ideas...but I was told that even if your erase all data on your cell phone...your cell provider backs all of it up...and with a warrant...they can get all your info anyway.

I hope that is incorrect....anyone have anyone info on that.

One approach is to use the phone's "smartness" to your own advantage. Programs like Tasker (for Android phones) will automate just about any process the phone is capable of. By no means a silver bullet, but it could help.

For example if you had a second house as your grow house, you can have it automatically turn off GPS, and disable all forms of wireless/cell communication any time you're in that general area. Nothing is getting sent to or from a phone in this state, to my knowledge. I know for sure that even Google (the company behind the Android os) can't reach it, so I'm interested in your last statement Leroy. Got any info on that?

Another possibility is to have Tasker disable the security lock when you're at home, but enable it any time you leave. You can also automate processes like deleting contents of folders regularly.

I'm pretty sure you could also set up a self destruct option too. Maybe something like if you shake the crap out of it for X continuous seconds, have it wipe the SD card and then run whatever command it needs to toast the OS.

You can also have it encrypt files automatically. You can in fact encrypt your whole phone with the latest android versions, no Tasker required, but I'm just not that hardcore to try it, lol.

It's all pretty open to possibilities and endless combinations. Sure, a lot of these suggestions are a pretty thin defense in a court, but I write it mainly for small guys like me who basically just don't want to catch heat in a random traffic stop because they forgot to delete some weed pics or something. And people who have a LOT of time to learn how to program all that!

The bigger picture is pretty worrying for me though.
 

lost in a sea

Lifer
Veteran
bottom line is dont trust any technology because its not your property anyway,, your just paying for the rights to use it and if you look in the fineprint the phone corp still owns the sim card (and all info that passes through it),,

my basic point is that technology always was set up as some big brother type scenario, the police have always been able to access any and all information that the phone company would know and people think its just starting to get bad now because they want us to be more intimidated by the state,, not to mention all the databases in military complexes in israel and all the "black rooms" accross the usa that monitor and store your internet/mobile info to profile you,,

profiling the citizens is worth more to a government than anything,, a bit like when the bankers got britain back by backing their puppet william II they did a big census called the dombsday book to see what they had got back,,

i see the internet now like a big bankers inquisition tool to figure out what their sheeple flock are falling for,,
 
This thread reminds me of Enemy of the State. Shit is scary man. You can buy a lot of tracking and surveillance equipment online these days. Imagine the shit the gov uses that you CANT buy.... even scarier
 
B

BrnCow

Some folks put all of their info on the SIM card and remove and destroy it if they get pulled over...
 

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