It's Entirely Reasonable For Police To Swipe a Suspicious Gift Card, Says Court (arstechnica.com) 204
An anonymous reader quotes Ars Technica: A U.S. federal appeals court has found that law enforcement can, without a warrant, swipe credit cards and gift cards to reveal the information encoded on the magnetic stripe. It's the third such federal appellate court to reach this conclusion. Last week, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found in favor of the government in United States v. Turner, establishing that it was entirely reasonable for Texas police officers to scan approximately 100 gift cards found in a car that was pulled over at a traffic stop. Like the previous similar 8th Circuit case that Ars covered in June 2016, the defendants challenged the search of the gift cards as being unreasonable. (The second case was from the 3rd Circuit in July 2015, in a case known as U.S. v. Bah.) In this case, after pulling over the car and running the IDs of both men, police found that there was an outstanding warrant for the passenger, Courtland Turner. When Turner was told to get out of the car and was placed in the patrol car, the officer returned to the stopped car and noticed an "opaque plastic bag partially protruding from the front passenger seat," as if someone had tried to push it under the seat to keep it hidden. The cop then asked the driver, Broderick Henderson, what was in the bag. Henderson replied that they had bought gift cards. When the officer then asked if he had receipts for them, Henderson replied that they had "bought the gift cards from another individual who sells them to make money." Turner's lawyers later challenged the scanning, arguing that this "search" of these gift cards went against their client's "reasonable expectation of privacy," an argument that neither the district court nor the appellate court found convincing. The 5th Circuit summarized: "After conferring with other officers about past experiences with stolen gift cards, the officer seized the gift cards as evidence of suspected criminal activity. Henderson was ticketed for failing to display a driver's license and signed an inventory sheet that had an entry for 143 gift cards. Turner was arrested pursuant to his warrant. The officer, without obtaining a search warrant, swiped the gift cards with his in-car computer. Unable to make use of the information shown, the officer turned the gift cards over to the Secret Service. A subsequent scan of the gift cards revealed that at least forty-three were altered, meaning the numbers encoded in the card did not match the numbers printed on the card. The investigating officer also contacted the stores where the gift cards were purchased -- a grocery store and a Walmart in Bryan, Texas provided photos of Henderson and Turner purchasing gift cards."
because everyone carries a bag of 100 gift cards (Score:4, Insightful)
dumb criminal made the mistake of driving illegally with an outstanding warrant and had a bag of over 100 gift cards. nothing suspicious
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Looks like the slippery slope towards the coming police state has gotten a few degrees steeper....
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Re:because everyone carries a bag of 100 gift card (Score:5, Insightful)
They should need to provide evidence that your gift cards were obtained illegally or were involved in the commission of a crime. You shouldn't need to prove your innocence to avoid being assumed guilty.
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They should need to provide evidence that your gift cards were obtained illegally or were involved in the commission of a crime. You shouldn't need to prove your innocence to avoid being assumed guilty.
Well, you need to READ the court documents before simplify whatever you see at face value...
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What sibling said.
It is not up to you to prove your innocence, it is up to the police to prove (or at least show reasonable evidence of) your guilt.
Now in this case,yes a dude with an outstanding warrant is going to raise suspicion, but honestly, it wouldn't have taken too much effort to, oh I dunno, hold the cards for 72 hours and then get a fucking court order. The cards can be returned after 72 hours if no order comes forth.
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I don't fully understand the significance of the police officer scanning the a card in his cruiser; I would have thought that would show a mis-match between the two credit card numbers at least, even if it couldn't get extended information.
Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is the information contained in a credit card / gift card in plain view? (No).
Does a LEO, without a warrant or probable cause, have the legal authority to open a container to peruse it's contents? (No)
So why then can a LEO seize and search the contents of a CC / Gift Card without probable cause or a warrant, when they can't legally open closed (but unlocked) containers on a person's person and possession thereof are in-of-themselves perfectly legal?
This is yet another bad case precedent eroding the very core of the 4th Amendment. There isn't even an attempt to reconcile it with constitutional law.
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
In case you do not know the scam, you go buy low value gift cards and empty them. You then imprint them with the card data from stolen gift cards of the same brand. The scratch off pin is supposed to help prevent this but does not. The stolen numbers may come from skimmers or data breaches. Now you can spend the stolen numbers.
In this situation, there was enough suspicion for probable cause to confiscate the cards. If the evidence is collected properly with PC or warrant, then it matters little if the officer can scan them or not. If he cannot complete an investigation on the materials with the tools at hand they will be sent for further analysis. This is no different than a white powder or green leafy substance on the dash. Maybe it is spilled and dried lettuce from a taco bell taco, maybe not (don't take that the wrong way, I think pot should be legal). However the same rules apply for any suspected illegal item that is confiscated legally.
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Without a warrant I don't understand how the evidence could be admissible.
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Because (1) there was someone in the car with an outstanding warrant, or because (2) they tried to hide the bag, or because (3) the bag contained a lot of gift cards, or because (4) some of the cards had been re-encoded?
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Does a LEO, without a warrant or probable cause, have the legal authority to open a container to peruse it's contents? (No)
These two individuals had 143 gift cards in their car. One of them had an outstanding warrant. Exactly how many gift cards would you consider to be an unreasonable amount? I write software for dealing with gift cards and credit cards and you want to know how many (test) cards I keep on my person? Less than half a dozen with my work stuff. So unless these two young outstanding citizens are going to give them to their 143 closest friends, I would say something is going on. Further more, the police asked them where they got the stack and the defendants indicated that they just bought the gift cards but didn't have a receipt.
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Right. I used to work for a company that managed travel cards.
I can think of a bunch of reasons for wanting 143 cards, but they all relate to breaking the law. For example:
* You steal some credit card numbers and use them to rechard the cards. By the time the credit cards are invalidated it is too late, the money is safely on the card.
* You steal/bully the cards knowing that you can spend the money before they're blacklisted
* You have a friend that works at a dodgy retailer and recharge the cards knowing
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Interesting)
why do you guys keep raising the issue of the AMOUNT of cards?
did the judge declare that the 4th ammendment is null and void if you have 'too many' of something?
now, go ahead: define EXACTLY what 'too many' is.
THAT is my point.
this is bullshit. the law was not followed and a new crap law was essentially created to help cops fuck people over at-will.
carrying 'too many cards' is not a crime. it does not matter what the cards are or any other details.
soon, carrying 'too much money' will be a crime. oops, forgot, they ALREADY declared that a crime ;(
I weep for us all. we don't respect laws anymore; we seem to do anything to make authoritarians happier. citizens - they don't really matter anymore, do they?
This! (Score:4, Interesting)
Everyone likes to claim that the Slippery Slope is an invalidation fallacy when in fact it's a warning of a potential outcome. If a person has in their possession a quantity of cards the Police suspects criminal, they are fully within their rights to request a warrant and detain the person until a Judge grants or denies the request. Courts in general do not take weeks or even days to file a warrant, and the detaining officer does not have to appear before the judge.
There is a reason we have a codified due process in this country. Stop giving away your rights!
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... and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath...
I am raising the amount of cards because seeing them all would, in my opinion, immediately reach the bar for probable cause.
Cop with a card reader sees a gift card
Cop does _not_ have probable cause and cannot use the presence of a gift card to get a warrant.
Cop with a card reader sees 143 gift cards
Cop now has probable cause and I would expect to have no difficulty obtaining a warrant.
If there were a bunch of legitimate reasons fo
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The reasons not only need to be legal and possible, but also more probable than carrying them as part of criminal activity.
In addition, ANY of those possible causes could have been given to the officer when he asked why a wanted criminal travels with a bag full of giftcards.
I already gave the example above. There are uncountable legal reasons to carry a crowbar. But there also are circumstances that create more than probable cause to suspect the guy carrying it of robbing a house.
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In theory, yes.
I don't know that much about the exact inner organisation of the US law enforcement, but as long as one could be obtained in time that would realistically allow to find a judge and have him issue it and send it back to the police officer waiting at the side of the road, yes.
How long would it take to get one? Do they have a judge on call that could fax it back to the police patrol?
If the legal system can handle issuing search warrants fast enough, I don't see any legal problems to require a se
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why do you guys keep raising the issue of the AMOUNT of cards?
did the judge declare that the 4th ammendment is null and void if you have 'too many' of something?
now, go ahead: define EXACTLY what 'too many' is.
THAT is my point.
this is bullshit. the law was not followed and a new crap law was essentially created to help cops fuck people over at-will.
carrying 'too many cards' is not a crime. it does not matter what the cards are or any other details.
soon, carrying 'too much money' will be a crime. oops, forgot, they ALREADY declared that a crime ;(
I weep for us all. we don't respect laws anymore; we seem to do anything to make authoritarians happier. citizens - they don't really matter anymore, do they?
The amount matters because the police are allowed to search the car and the gift cards with probable cause. The validity of the search is based on the sum total of things taking place at the time of the search. They arrested the passenger of the car for an outstanding warrant. As they arrested him, they noticed that it looked like he was trying to hide evidence of a further crime (bag partially hidden next to his seat). They pull out the card and see an extremely unusual number of gift cards. They ask
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Informative)
And yes, things with mag stripes are access devices as defined under this federal law. Having 143 access devices when a normal person may have at most half a dozen does raise concern that the person is committing a violation.
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Possessing a Gift Card is not a crime. How then does one articulate probable cause that any given Gift Card they come across might be a counterfeit one?
Absent some other outside source of information, possession alone is not defacto Probable Cause.
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What you have just described are good reasons for getting a warrant, not for a warrantless search.
And it already said that one of them has an outstanding warrant. Hmm... Sounds like someone who sees smoke coming off his TV and will not do anything (or he calls a repair man and schedule a visit) unless there is fire.
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This is one of those issues that "seems" like a good idea at first, but, has some negative implications.
My wife worked as a fundraising coordinator and worked with different vendors to sell (or give away) gift cards to people. Since we share a car, there have been many times that I was driving around with a box of gift cards (100? 200? something like that) in the trunk, etc. I expect this situation happens quite a bit since many vendors work with fundraising coordinators to sell gift cards, etc to raise mon
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This is one of those issues that "seems" like a good idea at first, but, has some negative implications.
My wife worked as a fundraising coordinator and worked with different vendors to sell (or give away) gift cards to people. Since we share a car, there have been many times that I was driving around with a box of gift cards (100? 200? something like that) in the trunk, etc.
You're looking at this rather myopically, as if it was just the gift cards that made the search reasonable. Already you've said - you have the gift cards in a box in the trunk. The passenger of the vehicle was being arrested for an outstanding warrant. As the officer was getting the passenger out of the vehicle he noticed a little bag that was partially hidden in the crevice between the center console and the car seat. That immediately looks like the passenger, who is lawfully under arrest, was trying t
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I agree with everything you say about the gift cards, but that is not the problem. The article stated it was an opaque bag that was spotted, not 143 gift cards. Unless the warrant of passenger had something to do with an illegal activity the could involve hiding stuff inside small opaque bags the how could there be reasonable suspicion? From my experiences with the courts, the only reason they defendants didn't win getting the search thrown out is that they did have enough money for a good attorney.
It was a reasonable search because the person who was sitting next to the gift card bag was being arrested. It appeared that the person being arrested attempted to hide the bag and failed. At that point a reasonable person would be suspicious of the contents of the bag. And it's the kind of reasonable suspicion that a police officer could easily articulate and a normal person would reasonably understand.
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Is it a crime to be in possession of credit cards / gift cards? (No)
It's not a crime but having 143 is something that constitutes reasonable suspicion. [wikipedia.org]
Is the information contained in a credit card / gift card in plain view? (No).
Actually, it technically was. Hear me out: gift cards are based on a electromagnetic stripe because they are cheap and an electromagnetic stripe is charged in a way that can be inspected passively. The cards are effectively glowing in a spectrum we simply cannot see with our eyes. I know it's a technicality because I mentioned it when I started.
Does a LEO, without a warrant or probable cause, have the legal authority to open a container to peruse it's contents? (No)
A) IANAL but I believe reasonable suspicion qualifies.
B) The cards were inspec
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Please, go read the opinion again. Particularly read Scalia's opinion, where he lays out the reasons why an infrared camera is an illegal search of a home. It has to do with the fact the home is the bastion of the Fourth Amendment. There is literally nowhere that receives more Fourth Amendment protections than the home.
A set of blank cards, which someone voluntarily gives to the police, receives far less protection. If a cop asks me for a birthday card I'm holding, and I voluntarily hand it over, and th
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1.) Possession of the card,
2.) A reader capable of reading the card's magnetic strip.
In other words, it requires a tool to gain access to the contents.
The argument for evidence in plain view, is specifically if you can observe the information, without disturbing the item. In the classic "Plain View" case that is often used as a reference, IIRC it involved a LEO physically lifting up a Stereo Receiver and turning
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Go read that opinion again. (It's another Scalia one.)
In that case, the officer was (a) in a home and (b) did not have the homeowner's permission to take hold of anything. The home is what ramped the protections up to the max; the fact the homeowner did not consent to anything kept those protections in force.
It's much different from the driver of a car giving evidence directly to a cop. The protections were lesser, and the driver waived them.
Not a biased result. (Score:5, Interesting)
... There isn't even an attempt to reconcile it with constitutional law.
Judges simply don't work that way. We may disagree with them, but by and large they are struggling to figure out the right answer according to constitutional precedent. The fact that multiple circuits of federal appeals judges have held that way emphasizes the fact that this is not some court going off the rails and neglecting the Constitution. Federal judges are much nicer, more thoughtful, and more considerate of the right result than the vast majority of people you meet in your everyday life.
I haven't read the case, but could easily construct a Fourth Amendment argument here that favors the police ability to scan the card and contact the vendors. Most obviously, the pen register case (Maryland v. Smith, IIRC) and the thermal sensor case (Kylo, maybe?) apply. You are transmitting information about the gift card to a third party without privilege (the store), so obviously you are not expecting that its contents will be private and you do not have a reasonable expectation in privacy in it under Smith. Personally I might be willing to revisit Smith on the other side, because it was passed in an age when Supreme Court Justices grew up with party lines and no actual expectation of privacy on the phone, but there is still a strong chain of well-established precedent that is respected in a common-law system like ours and will convince most judges--even ones who disagree with it.
Similarly, under the thermal sensor case, the fact that the tech for card reading is widely available in the civilian market means that the mere fact that you have to use tech doesn't help you.
Also, your description fails to capture the fact that the guy was under arrest because of an open warrant. I could construct arguments on his behalf that would give him some chance of winning, but the precedent clearly disfavors him. Just because we disagree with the decision of a court doesn't mean it was wrong, or that the judges were not trying to follow precedent. Case law is reasoning by analogy. It's not engineering, and it's not neat. It gives you a probability distribution that good arguments can shift one way or the other as a series of people try to figure out what the best answer is.
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This is simply a case of really lazy policing.
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That is part of the reason the judge(s) in this case found that swiping of the magnetic strips was no a violation of the 4th amendment, since there was no reasonable of expectation to privacy regarding the contents of the magnetic stripes:
http://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/op... [uscourts.gov]
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Another Fourth Amendment consequence flows from the commercial
purpose of gift cards. Unlike cell phones and computers, whose function of
storing personal information often results in access being restricted by a
password, the raison d
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In general, I'm against police swiping gift/ATM/credit cards but in this case they DID obtain a search warrant first and having 143 gift cards is questionable, especially when combined with a criminal history and no good explanation.
Henderson handed the bag to the officer. Also (Score:3)
As an abstract matter of law, I would take issue with it if the officer removed and opened the bag without consent. AFTER he saw there were over a hundred gift cards in there, I think that's reasonable suspicion.
In this case,after arresting Turner on the outstanding warrant, the officer asked Henderson "what's in that bag?". Henderson responded by handing the bag to the officer. No Constitutional violation there, IMHO. n fact I'll ask you right now "what's in your pocket, Matful?" I don't think asking vi
PS the court ruled that reading the cards (Score:5, Interesting)
My above post covered looking inside the bag (Henderson handed the bag to the officer) and taking possession of the cards (143 gift cards in the possession of a habitual criminal is suspicious). The defendant didn't even argue the first point, because the bad guy did hand the bag to the officer. The defendant questioned the cops reading the stripes on the cards. The court's reasoning is interesting.
In order for a fourth amendment l right of privacy to apply, the person must have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the item. That's two tests - an expectation of privacy must exist, and it must be *reasonable* to expect that the information will remain private. The court pointed out that people often store a lot of personal information on cell phones and computers and are often protect them with a password, so there is a reasonable expectation of privacy. On the other hand, the mag stripe on a Best Buy gift card has a small amount of information put there by Best Buy, so that Best Buy can read it back later. A consumer wouldn't store any personal information, or any information at all, on a Best Buy gift card, and they would fully expect Best Buy to read the mag stripe information. So there's no expectation of privacy - they intended to have the clerk at Best Buy read those cards and for Best Buy to store the info, and there was no personal information, the court ruled. No reasonable expectation of privacy means to fourth amendment violation.
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Or do you need a device/tool to read what's on them?
The court (and I) distinguished between gift & (Score:2)
Yes, if you hand me a Best Buy gift card, I know the magnetic stripe contains a Best Buy gift card number, placed there by Best Buy, for Best Buy to read back.
An SD card may contain far more information, placed there by anyone (most likely whoever has it), and may well contain personal information. The court in this case pointed out the difference.
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Yes, but no.. He handed the bag to the officer (Score:2)
I've executed arrest warrants in the same town this occurred, I think I even arrested Broderick Henderson, the driver in this case. My understanding in the same - a warrant to arrest the person necessarily implies a "search incident to arrest" can be made. Having seen Broderick and Turner's criminal history, you damn sure better search them before you have them riding in the back seat of your car! However, search incident to arrest no longer allows you to search the car they were riding in, generally. Befor
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without a warrant or probable cause
Yeah except for the guy with an outstanding warrant in the car holding a bag that it every reasonable interpretation has evidence of money laundering and or some other form of card skimming.
What next? Yes offer this 143kg of cocaine is just for personal use?
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Is it a crime to be in possession of credit cards / gift cards? (No)
Is it a crime to carry a crowbar and a bag of jewelry at night while wearing a black ski mask while a house alarm can be heard from down the street?
No.
Does it matter? Heck No!
Because there is more than probable cause that this is the guy who just broke into that house!
Is driving a guy with an outstanding warrant a hint to a crime going on? Yes, it's probable that the driver (without a license!) is helping that guy to evade arrest.
Is the information contained in a credit card / gift card in plain view? (No).
Well, the mag stripe should not contain any other data than printed on the fro
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Is it then a crime carry a bag of jewelry at night?
If the suspect had card readers, or other paraphernalia present that would facilitate the reading/access/spoofing the of the cards, your analogy would be spot on and I would further argue that it was enough to constitute probable cause.
But mere possession alone. Just that. Just possession of the cards, is not enough.
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Your argument is a good one, except that to make it fit lets remove the ski mask and the crowbar and the house alarm.
Is it then a crime carry a bag of jewelry at night?
No.
But is it probable cause to do so when there is a warrant out and you are wanted for jewelry theft?
I should think so.
If the suspect had card readers, or other paraphernalia present that would facilitate the reading/access/spoofing the of the cards, your analogy would be spot on and I would further argue that it was enough to constitute probable cause.
But mere possession alone. Just that. Just possession of the cards, is not enough.
It's definitely not enough to be considered a crime.
But definitely enough for reasonable suspicion. Reasonable enough to ask for an at least possible legit reason. Even if they made up a threadbare story about prizes for an orphanage fund raiser raffle on the spot, that may have been something worthy of discussing if the LEO still had probable cause, but here nothing was presented to dispe
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The probable cause is the presence of a person with a warrant for their arrest. Try reading before you post stupid shit on the Internet.
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Courtland was arrested on an outstanding warrant. If this were a regular traffic stop then I might have a problem with it. But it wasn't---not after the ID check hit on his warrant.
Since they were arresting Courtland, they are clear to search him and his immediate area.
The bag of cards was halfway under the seat, apparently "hidden" by the arrestee.
Since the arrestee was the passenger, they could search around his seat---no problem at all in this situation, anything within arm's reach counts as the immediat
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
What you've described would be good reason for a warrant to be obtained, not for a warrantless search.
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Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Police should be required to state on record, into their body-cam the reason they are investigating the bag. "It might be drugs." Not drugs, close it and waive them on. Anything else should be excluded anyway, as there can't have been reasonable suspicion (or the more strict probable cause) if their guess was 100% wrong.
There should be a law passed that the police must articulate PC or RS before invoking either to perform any search. Anything else should get the policeman disciplined, and the arrest thrown out, and evidence returned with apologies (even if it's actually illegal).
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The bigger issue is that they wanted to search an opaque bag.
The details of what exactly happened are critical here. If they said they wanted to search it and he said OK, go ahead then that's their prerogative. If they wanted to search it and he said no and they searched it anyway, that's a violation of his rights. If they wanted to search it and he said no and they said if you don't let us we'll arrest you, that might be entrapment. But IANAL.
This is why you don't consent to anything. You might get reamed anyway, but at least you have an argument to work with.
There should be a law passed that the police must articulate PC or RS before invoking either to perform any search.
Before
Re:Well, there goes the 4th Amendment again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not drugs, close it and waive them on. Anything else should be excluded anyway, as there can't have been reasonable suspicion (or the more strict probable cause) if their guess was 100% wrong.
"It might be drugs"!
*opens bag*
"Uah a severed head... oh well it wasn't drugs I was wrong with initial suspicion but I guess that's how the system works now"
*returns bag*
"Have a nice day sir"
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The bigger issue is that they wanted to search an opaque bag. For no reason other than they were curious. Then when it's opened, and shows cards, again, they wanted to search, for no reason other than curiosity.
No, they asked what was in the bag and the driver said it was gift cards (bought in suspicious circumstances) and then handed it to the cop. He both incriminated himself and consented to the search. Textbook "don't talk to cops" stuff.
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They got one. It's right there in the summary.
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Heck, you could store malicious code on punch cards if you wanted to, but there's not a lot machines around that can read those in this century.
Now if that malicious code could crash, compromise, or otherwise screw up the system the cops are using, it's a real possibility. Of course to create such a thing, you're probably going to have to find out just what the cops use so you can try to find an exploitable weakness.
Now that's a project t
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...
But don't worry, I'm sure it'll show up on a TV show or movie soon enough, and it'll probably have a single card load an entire A.I. infiltration and control backdoor suite as well. (Hollywood isn't exactly realistic, and that's on a good day.)
And if you scan it wrong, an enormous explosion will occur and people will go flying out the door miraculously just ahead of a supersonic 1500-degree fireball as random chunks of concrete and twisted metal rain down on both sides.
I was thinking more like storing encryption keys or something like bitcoins on them myself. What does it say about me that that though occurred before even considering that gift cards store "money?"
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They didn't need one in this case . The guy already had a warrant out for his arrest. The cops found it when they ran his ID.
Police are allowed to search arrestees and their immediate vicinity. Maybe the guy could argue that the area under his car seat isn't in his immediate vicinity, but I don't know any idiot who would buy that.
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The information on a license plate is in plain view. The data on a magnetic strip is not.
You may not be able to tell that a car is stolen just from the license plate. In fact, the police do not use the license plate at all to identify a stolen vehicle. They might use the plate to stop someone with probable cause, but they will look at the VINs stamped on the engine block, the dashboard, inside the driver's door, and anywhere else that is required to properly identify the car.
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In fact, the police do not use the license plate at all to identify a stolen vehicle.
Not once they're out of their vehicles and looking for it up close, but of course they use the license plate to identify stolen vehicles. At least, potential ones. When they get closer, they can use the VIN.
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In fact, the police do not use the license plate at all to identify a stolen vehicle.
Not once they're out of their vehicles and looking for it up close, but of course they use the license plate to identify stolen vehicles. At least, potential ones. When they get closer, they can use the VIN.
Yes. That's exactly what I said:
They might use the plate to stop someone with probable cause
Here's a better question (Score:2)
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why do cops have a Credit Card reader in their squad car? I'd heard stories of some cops taking payment for tickets when they pull you over and threatening jail time if you don't pay then and there...
It's not a credit card reader per se, just a magnetic stripe reader. The *vast* majority of magnetic cards of any type have their data encoded in one of only a few different ISO standard formats. Anything can read them, although they may or may not be able to make sense of the data encoded on them.
You can buy them for like $20 (Score:3)
And they'll dump the data out as keyboard output, if you like. We used to use them at the university I work at to do pay for printing. You'd swipe your student ID which would feed the info to the print program that could then contact the card office database and look up your account. Same idea as a credit card terminal, but just for printing (Pharos, if you are wondering).
We also used them just to let students register for events. When they'd come to an open house they'd sign in, which in the past meant wri
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why do cops have a Credit Card reader in their squad car? I'd heard stories of some cops taking payment for tickets when they pull you over and threatening jail time if you don't pay then and there...
Doesn't the back of your drivers license have a magnetic stripe on it? Every state license I have had for the last 10+ years has had one. The data is typically Latin-1 ASCII encoded binary data across multiple magnetic tracks. The data was probably readable on the card, the officer just didn't understand what it meant.
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Doesn't the back of your drivers license have a magnetic stripe on it?
No. Oregon has an optical PDF_417 text data block and a CODE_128 barcode on the back.
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why do cops have a Credit Card reader in their squad car? I'd heard stories of some cops taking payment for tickets when they pull you over and threatening jail time if you don't pay then and there...
Doesn't the back of your drivers license have a magnetic stripe on it? Every state license I have had for the last 10+ years has had one. The data is typically Latin-1 ASCII encoded binary data across multiple magnetic tracks. The data was probably readable on the card, the officer just didn't understand what it meant.
Washington State does not
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As the cards change every few years, so does the hardware and support to read them. A nice long term contract.
Constant "no bid" software updates might be all thats needed on some easy to cary or existing hardware.
The press could ask to see budgets per state in paper. Paper budget records in the US usually a walk in and ask protected under
Wait... (Score:2)
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The scam a few years ago was to go in, grab some gift cards, record the numbers, and check every so often to see if they'd been activated. That is why gift cards now come in "peek proof" containers instead of just being rubber cemented to a piece of card stock.
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Gift cards use such a bad hash algorithm that you can guess the numbers to rewrite them with, and have them actually work? Seems like 99% of the time you'd be guessing a number that had never been activated or had already been used up, unless these things are much stupider than I think they are.
If I was designing gift cards, I'd just encode a GUID onto each one. The chances for a duplicate are rather astronomical.
They may have the right to swipe them... (Score:2, Interesting)
But did the Appeals court consider if they have the right to *drain* them and take all the money left on their balances?
https://www.techdirt.com/artic... [techdirt.com]
Experts disagree ... (Score:4, Informative)
Prof. Orin Kerr, a noted expert on the 4th Amendment and on computer crime law posted his negative reaction [washingtonpost.com] to this ruling; he has a longer commentary on this issue here [washingtonpost.com]
According to Prof. Kerr this is the third court of appeals to rule that that reading the stripes is "not a search", and that this runs counter to Supreme Court precedent such as Arizona v. Hicks [google.com].
What's not reasonable... (Score:2)
What's not reasonable is purchasing one of these gift cards. Who the hell wants to lock their money into a specific company?
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Having clean people get a gift and a later refund given some really friendly return policy?
Even if having to show ID to get a refund on a big cash and gift card mixed sale gets the cash back out of the gift card.
Do that in the another state over days and it slowly adds up. Finding people with issues to work off who have no law enforcement record to buy and refund is not hard.
A plate scan of the car park would not find any issues wit
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Groupon used to do buy one get one free coupons for gift cards. So, by paying $20, I receive $40 I can spend at that retailer. These are limited time offers but the resulting gift cards have no expiration. I have been in possession of up to 10 of these gift cards at any given moment.
I actually could imagine a scenario where someone games such deals and banks a few hundred of these, then sells them for 75% face value. Everyone wins, reseller and second buyer each get a 25% RoI.
Just trying to pay the IRS (Score:5, Funny)
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did your IRS 'agent' tell you he was just doing the needful??
Cards with chips (Score:2)
Put it in perspective. (Score:3)
Alice and Bob are driving down the road when they're pulled over by cops. Alice is driving. Bob gets arrested on an outstanding warrant. As Bob's getting out of the car, the cops see a black plastic bag underneath Bob's seat. They ask Alice about the bag. She says, "This? Oh, it's just oregano, officers. A lot of oregano. No, we don't have receipts for it, and, uh, we bought it at ... err, from some guy. But it's just oregano. See?", and gives it to the cop. The cop, upon opening the baggie, sees what looks like oregano. But the volume of the oregano is much more than you'd need for a pizza, so the cop figures it might be marijuana and decides to run a field test on it. Ultimately this field test is turned over to the State Police, which are able to conclusively say it's marijuana. Bob is now facing marijuana possession charges and complains his Fourth Amendment rights were violated.
That's exactly what happened here. The defendant was arrested on an outstanding warrant, the arresting officer asked what was in the bag, the driver gave the bag over and said he and the defendant bought 143 gift cards from "someone", but couldn't identify whom, nor provide any receipts, and their business plan was to "resell" these cards for a profit. Put all that together and it's on the same level as telling the cop your weed is oregano -- it's a lie that's completely transparent.
Since the cops were given the evidence, they did not seize it illegally. Since the cops had an incriminating statement from one of the participants, they had probable cause to check for illegality. Legal seizure plus probable cause equals go directly to jail, do not collect a $200 gift card.
This Slashdot headline is misleading to the point of being journalistic malpractice.
OK, 100+ is out of line. What's in line? (Score:2)
IMHO this is the slippery slope argument. I'll agree 99+ is questionable as hell, but if you let them do a warrantless search for 99 cards they'll cite that case to let them do a warrantless search for 1.
Reminds me of a decade or two back when they decided anyone carrying more than $10k in cash was a drug dealer and could confisca
Equivalent (Score:2)
This is equivalent to getting out a blacklight and looking for bloodstains. As far as I'm aware it does not require a warrant to check an individuals belongings for marks invisible to the naked eye.
While I am, in general, against the significant overreach of police powers without a corresponding increase in their accountability, I don't think this is an example of that. This is simple application of existing laws in a new context. I don't think playing a CD or cassette tape counts as 'search' either.
Re:To the Secret Service? (Score:5, Informative)
Is the officer very well connected or does the Secret Service widely offer the service to scan gift cards?
I'm surprised the Secret Service just takes these requests as part of their duties..
Gift cards are a modern way to perform money laundering, which is part of the financial crimes that the Secret Service is in charge of when it's not protecting the President.
Old and Busted: Money Orders
New Hotness: Applebee's Credits
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Gift cards are a modern way to perform money laundering, which is part of the financial crimes that the Secret Service is in charge of when it's not protecting the President.
That is, in fact, the secret service's original purpose: to investigate counterfeiting operations, often covertly (hence "secret").
Fun fact: that was also a task Isaac Newton performed for the British government.
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Not only that, it was their first job, *before* protecting the president!
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Re:Sounds reasonable (Score:5, Insightful)
That's one of my problems with the rules of evidence: the only penalty for unlawfully obtaining evidence is that the evidence is thrown out. That protects only the guilty, innocent people who's rights are violated have zero recourse! I thinks cops should be penalized for violating the rules, but if you got evidence of a crime, unless you have reason to suspect that the cops themselves planted the evidence, it should be admissible in court.
I disagree. I say that it protects the innocent also because the police have to think twice before they perform an unlawful search on anyone. While you may say that an innocent person is unlikely to be unlawfully searched, I say look at New York's Stop and Frisk policy. The only thing you have to do wrong in NYC to be unlawfully searched is to have the wrong skin color.
Re:Sounds reasonable (Score:5, Insightful)
If cops are personally liable for illegal searches and got prosecuted and jailed, then they would be thinking twice themselves. As it is, they can even jail you on bogus charges without any repercussions - "you may beat the rap but you won't beat the ride". Unfortunately, cops are not even prosecuted for straight-up murder very often, so thinking that prosecutors would bring charges for illegal searches is just fantasy right now.
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... The only thing you have to do wrong in NYC to be unlawfully searched is to have the wrong skin color.
I've been stopped and frisked in Chicago an uncountable number of times. They never found anything on me. I'm white. If you walk and are young, you get stopped. There may be a racial element, but, considering my experience, that's not the main issue.
Re:Sounds reasonable (Score:5, Insightful)
Because they consider you a criminal. You were presumed guilty until they found you innocent.
If you think this is acceptable then you wouldn't have a problem being frisked everywhere you go. Every restaurant, every movie theater, every store you want to enter, they frisk you because they're presuming you're a criminal.
Congratulations. You're another shining example of how the terrorists have won. They've made it so we fear everything and everyone.
Re: Sounds reasonable (Score:3)
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It was a fishing expedition that happened to bear fruit this time, still ridiculous.
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Recall the currency transaction reporting, suspicious activity reports, monetary instrument logs and how structuring is tracked well under $10,000 in cash.
No escape from months of CCTV as the card is offered and then used.