Good thing I park in my garage....
You can find devices that detect tracking bugs such as these GPS locators for around $500..
i have done buisness with greatsouthernsecurity.---. great gear great pricesYou can find devices that detect tracking bugs such as these GPS locators for around $500. They are legal to buy and own. I would destroy any tracking device regardless of their threats of prosecuting you. I doubt if they get to the point of tracking your movements that you would be worried about such a stupid charge compared to what they were watching you originally for.
Also what needs to happen is the cops and public officials need the same kind of treatment they are dishing out. Watch Will Smith's movie called Enemy of the State, more specifically the part where the bald head guy with glasses gets involved. They turn all the tactics and devices used by the government to stress out and locate people against the government who deployed them in the first place. Giving them a taste of their own medicine.
You can find devices that detect tracking bugs such as these GPS locators for around $500. They are legal to buy and own. I would destroy any tracking device regardless of their threats of prosecuting you. I doubt if they get to the point of tracking your movements that you would be worried about such a stupid charge compared to what they were watching you originally for.
Destroying the device alerts them to the fact you know what they are up to. Better to buy some time. I would casually drive to a parking lot of a shopping mall and transfer it to another random car. Then I would go home, tear down and "sanitize" my grow area. Then wait to see what happens next.
If one had stainless steel balls they could put it on cap car, let them track one of their own around.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals just decided that it was legal for the police to put a GPS tracking device on your car, sitting in your driveway, on your property. Here's how to protect yourself.
Matt's post about the decision explains more about the ruling. To quickly summarize, the supreme court says that police can look through things that anyone in the public could come across, meaning, your driveway is freely accessible to the public, hence, the cops can shove a GPS locator onto your car. Then they can use it track you. Without a warrant.
How do you stop this without combing over the underside—or perhaps even inside—of your car and finding the GPS tracker? With technology.
Your first bet is probably to find out if someone is tracking you or not. You can turn here for cellphone and bug device detectors. But these aren't 100%, so if you're really paranoid and want to hide your location, you'll want to just go ahead and stop the trackers anyway.
The first type is a GPS jammer, which is technically illegal to buy and use in the US, so keep that in mind. These types of GPS jammers plug into the cigarette lighter in your car, and will "prohibit GPS signal" up to 10 meters. Ten meters isn't too far, but it isn't super close either, so cars next to you might get some GPS interference as you drive down the road.
This model is $33. There are handheld and higher-powered versions available for slightly more. Our friends at Brando have one too, for $50.
If you're worried that someone is tracking your cellphone, there's a signal blocking bag for about $10 that you can shove your device into when not in use.
You also have the cellphone-type trackers, which need to be stopped with a different device: a cellphone jammer. There are various portable versions, as well as ones that go into your car. These types of jammers are as illegal as the GPS ones, so again, know what you're getting into.
Is it worth it to go to the potential legal troubles of owning and operating a GPS or cellphone jammer if you're not doing anything wrong? That's up to you to decide. But if you are doing something that you want to make sure the government doesn't know about and they're already surveilling you, it might already be too late to get one of these. [The Jammer Store]