Steve300xcw
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2017
- Messages
- 1,058
. I’d send them a thank you letter when I got out that I came home to a working safe. And I do own a liberty.
Very interesting way of looking at things
. I’d send them a thank you letter when I got out that I came home to a working safe. And I do own a liberty.
If the owner was in contact with Liberty and okd it, that is a completely different story.And just so it’s in the open, an iPhone takes less than 30 mins to crack anymore so you aren’t safe there either.
If a subpoena was requested that takes about 4 minutes to complete and some states only require a notary signature on those. Some people also keep things not protected under 2A in safes. Any safe company out there would have yielded its contents in a matter of minutes; lock smith, grinder or gaining the combo. The vast majority of people also provide the combo when asked to avoid damage. I think some are getting upset for a safe owner who may not even feel sold out by liberty. I’d send them a thank you letter when I got out that I came home to a working safe. And I do own a liberty.
Yea. The fbi would never suppress information about something like Jan 6. Never.Well regardless of how they got in or the circumstances around it I’m sure their language in the warrant was broad enough that it wasn’t a warrantless search to enter that safe. This isn’t an issue where things will be suppressed despite what was found inside or how they got in.
if they have a warrant to get in the safe then they are getting in the safe one way or another. frankly i would rather them open in via code than get in by damaging the safe
In other news it was reported it wasn't specifically on the warrant and the code was obtained after a phone call to Liberty.
It’s thread worthy because liberty has no obligation to provide a master code or key. Apple did the same thing with a shooting years ago but didn’t give access to a phone owned by the suspect. For gun owners it is worth knowing which companies respect your rights and doesn’t fold to alphabet groups for their given agenda.
. Since I’ve been in LE I’ve seen drastic changes in privacy. When I started in was legal and standard procedure to search the contents of a person’s phone during a traffic stop arrest.
For example, suspect caught leaving a vehicle burglary. Suspect arrested based on eye witness account and stolen object in plain view. Phone would have been searched (at the time, this is no longer permissible without exigency or a warrant) to find out if there were other victims property than had been traded or pawned, co-conspirators communicating. As technology got more advanced the massive amount of information stored on phones was respected by the courts allowing for a warrant.And what were yall hoping to find on a phone?
Liberty was provided with a valid search warrant which is the requirement under company policy to provide that sort of information to law enforcement. The company stated it has refused numerous LE requests in the past when they were not provided a valid search warrant (which likewise aligns with company policy).There is a legal process to get hat information if th fbi needed it. The correct response from Liberty was "get a subpeona". Perhaps that is what happened and that will come to light. But the information we have now is that the fbi call and asked for it. By simply handing it over, Liberty has denied their customer a step in the legal process.
Unfortunately, we have now seen many instances where federal agencies have acted inappropriately towards political opponents. It was just recently that it came to light that the FBI was asking media companies to illegally censor Americans speech rights. So it is not a stretch to imagine that a violation of someone else rights may be occurring.
Liberty has bypassed one of the safe guards protecting citizens by justing handing his information over. I'm glad people know that is how they handle these matters.