Archive for February, 2012

State-by-State Recording Laws

Monday, February 27th, 2012

This guide provides a quick reference to the specific provisions of each jurisdiction’s wiretap law. It outlines whether one-party or all-party consent is required to permit recording of a conversation. In some instances, courts have provided further guidance on the law.

This is only a general guide; therefore, it is highly recommended that you review a state’s entire section by clicking on the state name at: http://www.rcfp.org/can-we-tape/state-state-guide

Although most of these statutes address wiretapping and eavesdropping, they usually apply to electronic recording of any conversations, including phone calls and in-person interviews.

Regardless of the state, it is almost always illegal to record a conversation to which you are not a party, do not have consent to tape, and could not naturally overhear. Federal law and most state laws also make it illegal to disclose the contents of an illegally intercepted call or communication. Some states have laws against criminal or tortuous purpose use of recordings, regardless of consent.

At least 24 states have laws outlawing certain uses of hidden cameras in private places. Those laws can also be found on the above website.

One-Party Consent Statutes

Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia permit individuals to record conversations to which they are a party without informing the other parties that they are doing so. These laws are referred to as “one-party consent” statutes, and as long as you are a party to the conversation, it is legal for you to record it. (Nevada also has a one-party consent statute, but the state Supreme Court has interpreted it as an all-party rule.)

All-Parties Consent Statutes

Twelve states require, under most circumstances, the consent of all parties to a conversation. Those jurisdictions are California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Washington. Be aware that you will sometimes hear these referred to inaccurately as “two-party consent” laws. If there are more than two people involved in the conversation, all must consent to the taping.

All-Parties Consent Statutes States:

California – Must have consent of all parties to intercept or eavesdrop upon any confidential communication, including a telephone call or wire communication. Conversations that occur at any public gathering where one could expect to be overheard, including any legislative, judicial or executive proceeding open to the public, are not covered by the statute.

Connecticut - It is illegal to tape a telephone conversation in Connecticut without the consent of all parties. Consent should be given prior to the recording, and should either be in writing or recorded verbally, or a warning that the conversation is being taped should be recorded. However, re-recording an illegally taped conversation by a third party may not violate the statute.

Florida - All parties must consent to the recording or the disclosure of the contents of any wire, oral or electronic communication in Florida. Consent is not required for the taping of a non-electronic communication uttered by a person who does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in that communication. A federal appellate court has held that because only interceptions made through an “electronic, mechanical or other device” are illegal under Florida law, telephones used in the ordinary course of business to record conversations do not violate the law.

Illinois - An eavesdropping device cannot be used to record or overhear a conversation without the consent of all parties to the conversation. Standard radio scanners are not eavesdropping devices, according to a 1990 decision from an intermediate appellate court. In addition, a camera is not an eavesdropping device.

Maryland - it is unlawful to tape record a conversation without the permission of all the parties. State courts have interpreted the laws to protect communications only when the parties have a reasonable expectation of privacy, and thus, where a person in a private apartment was speaking so loudly that residents of an adjoining apartment could hear without any sound enhancing device, recording without the speaker’s consent did not violate the wiretapping law.

Massachusetts – It is a crime to record any conversation, whether oral or wire, without the consent of all parties in Massachusetts.

Michigan- Any person who willfully uses any device to overhear or record a conversation without the consent of all parties is guilty of illegal eavesdropping, whether or not they were present for the conversation. The eavesdropping statute has been interpreted by one court as applying only to situations in which a third party has intercepted a communication. This interpretation allows a participant in a conversation to record that conversation without the permission of other parties.

Montana – A reporter in Montana cannot tape record a conversation without knowledge of all parties to the conversation. Exceptions to this rule include the recording of: elected or appointed officials and public employees, when recording occurs in the performance of public duty; persons speaking at public meetings, and persons given warning of the transcription. If one party gives warning, then either party may record.

Nevada – Consent of all parties is required to tape a conversation in Nevada. Possible exception: If the interception is made with the prior consent of one of the parties to the communication and an emergency situation exists in which it is impractical to gain a court order before intercepting the communication, an exception may be made. This exception applies mostly to law enforcement officers who proceed without a warrant.

New Hampshire – It is a felony to intercept or disclose the contents of any telecommunication or oral communication without the consent of all parties. However, it is only a misdemeanor if a party to a communication, or anyone who has the consent of only one of the parties, intercepts a telecommunication or oral communication.

Pennsylvania - It is a felony to intercept, or get any other person to intercept any wire, electronic, or oral communication without the consent of all the parties. Consent is not required of any parties if the parties do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy for their non-electronic communication.

Washington – All parties generally must consent to the interception or recording of any private communication, whether conducted by telephone, telegraph, radio or face-to-face. There are several stipulations to this statute; therefore, it is highly recommended that you read the entire section for this state.

One-Party Consent Statutes States:

Alabama - The eavesdropping statute criminalizes the use of “any device” to overhear or record communications, whether the eavesdropper is present or not, without the consent of at least one party engaged in the communication.

Alaska- It is a misdemeanor in Alaska to use an eavesdropping device to hear or record a conversation without the consent of at least one party to the conversation. The state’s highest court has held that the eavesdropping statute was intended to prohibit only third-party interception of communications and thus does not apply to a participant in a conversation.

Arizona – An individual must have the consent of at least one party to a conversation in order to legally intercept a wire or electronic communication, including wireless and cellular calls. Utilizing a device to overhear a conversation while not present, without the consent of a party to that conversation, is also illegal. Consent is not required for the taping of a non-electronic communication uttered by a person who does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy for that communication.

Arkansas – Intercepting or recording any wire, oral, cellular or cordless phone conversation is illegal in Arkansas, unless the person recording is a party to the conversation, or one of the parties to the conversation has given prior consent.

Colorado – Recording or intercepting a telephone conversation, or any electronic communication, without the consent of at least one party to the conversation is a felony. Recording a communication from a cordless telephone, however, is a misdemeanor. However, nothing in these statutes “shall be interpreted to prevent a news agency, or an employee thereof, from using the accepted tools and equipment of that news medium in the course of reporting or investigating a public and newsworthy event.” Additionally, a person may use wiretapping or eavesdropping devices on his own premises for security or business purposes, if reasonable notice of the use of such devices is given to the public.

Delaware – There is some conflict with regards to whether a party to a conversation can record the communication without the other party’s consent. Delaware’s wiretapping and surveillance law specifically allows an individual to “intercept” any wire, oral or electronic communication to which the individual is a party, or a communication in which at least one of the parties has given prior consent. However, a Delaware privacy law makes it illegal to intercept “without the consent of all parties.” The wiretapping law is much more recent, and at least one federal court has held that, even under the privacy law, an individual can record his own conversations. (more…)

‘Piggyback Bandit’ Strikes Teenage Victims

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Everyone is familiar with party crashers, but have you ever heard of anyone crashing high school sporting events just to get a piggyback ride?

A stocky man shows up in a basketball uniform for a game at Century High School in North Dakota. No one objects because the players and coaches assume he is a fan who had come with another team.

“He helped lay out uniforms, got water. He even gave a couple of kids shoulder massages. Creepy stuff like that,” said Jim Haussler - activities director for the Bismarck Public School District. Creepy is good word to describe this behavior, but it gets weirder.

When the game was over, the hefty man hung out with the winning team on the court and asked if he could get a piggyback ride. One player was caught off guard but gave him one.

“He makes himself appear as if he’s limited or handicapped. I think he plays an empathy card, so to speak,” Haussler said. “We didn’t realize what we were dealing with until several days later.”

They later learned that on that Feb. 4 evening, they had come in contact with the Piggyback Bandit. Sherwin Shayegan of Bothell, Wash., is a 28-year-old man who ingratiates himself with high school sports teams. He then hoists his hefty 5-foot-8, 240-pound frame onto the backs of the student athletes.

Shayegan’s strange acts reach back to 2008 and had been mainly confined to Washington and Oregon. Since last fall, he has taken his strange act east to Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota, leaving a trail of befuddled athletes in his wake.

Shayegan favors basketball games, but he also sprung himself onto hockey, soccer and football players. This guy either asks for piggyback rides, offers to pay for them or sometimes just springs himself onto some poor, unsuspecting player’s back.

Shayegan has also used the guise of pretending to interview athletes for a term paper, acting as a team manager or simply blending in with the group to get his piggyback thrills.

No one has been able to determine why he does these strange things or who coined the “Piggyback Bandit” nickname.

Shayegan, contacted on his cellphone Tuesday, politely declined to talk about the piggyback rides until he could talk to an attorney. “I’d prefer not to comment, if that’s OK,” he said.

Shayegan has a lengthy criminal rapsheet in Washington as well as nine outstanding warrants in one town in that state. His piggyback games caused him to be banned from high school sporting events in Washington, Oregon, Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota.

In October, Shayegan was arrested in Helena, Mont., for jumping on two high school soccer players during a state tournament.

Mark Beckman, executive director of the Montana High School Sports Association said, “What’s disturbing to me is that he is jumping on our young athletes, he is 240 pounds, and he can hurt someone.”

Shayegan pleaded guilty on Feb. 1 to two misdemeanor assault charges. He was fined $730, given a 360-day suspended prison sentence and told not to go to any more Montana high school events. “Go back to Seattle and behave,” Judge Bob Wood told him.

None of this stopped Shayegan. Three days later, he attended the Bismarck basketball game and received another piggyback ride. He also scored another piggyback ride from a hockey player after the game on that same day.

Surveillance video shows Shayegan dressed in a basketball uniform and hanging out with students in the hallway of the Century High School in North Dakota. This one-day spree caused him to be banned from sporting events by the North Dakota High School Activities Association.

Again, Shayegan was not deterred. He took his act to Minnesota that same week and appeared at three basketball games. He even attended one college game. At that Feb. 8 game, Shayegan sat near the St. Olaf bench. As in the Bismark game, everyone assumed he had come with the other team. (more…)

Texas Constable Admits Ordering Bugging Says FBI Affidavit

Friday, February 17th, 2012

This is a story about a corrupt law enforcement official and his accomplices. So many individuals were involved and there were several witnesses. How did this man think he would never be caught?

For those of you who were not born and raised in Texas, you may not be familiar with a constable. A Texas constable is a law enforcement officer who is elected by the county residents they serve. A constable and the constable’s deputies are the enforcement officers for the local Justice of the Peace. They are peace officers who have a lot of authority. The constable and deputy constables can make arrests, issue citations and are authorized to investigate any crime or traffic offense that happens in their presence or that a citizen reports to them.

Texas constable Fred Walker told the FBI he secretly bugged other official’s offices after they were accused of illegally forcing motorists to forfeit their cash, according to a search warrant affidavit.

Based on interviews conducted by FBI agents and Texas Rangers, the affidavit quotes the Shelby County Constable as saying he authorized the installation of hidden surveillance cameras and digital recorders despite not having the legal authority to do so.

The affidavit also includes a statement from a witness who claims Walker helped organize a scheme to sell drugs seized from suspects.

It’s just another chapter in a longtime drama in Tenaha, a town of 1,160 near the Louisiana border. Fred Walker,53, was Tenaha’s city marshal at the time of the alleged bugging. He was elected as constable in 2010.

Nearly $800,000 in cash has been seized from motorists stopped for traffic violations along U.S. Highway 59 in this town leading to lawsuits and a federal criminal investigation of the county’s former district attorney and other officials. (more…)

Microsoft – Latest Victim of Hacking

Thursday, February 16th, 2012

 

It seems that at least once a month we are reading a story about another large company being the victim of hacking. Reports on computer hacking into customer databases of large companies is becoming common news.

The latest victim is Microsoft’s online retail store serving India. Yes, computer giant Microsoft can’t even protect the personal data of its customers. That is scary!

I resisted online shopping for many years for this very reason. Occasionally, I am forced to make purchases online, but I am never comfortable doing so. It is obvious that large corporations are not doing enough to protect the personal information of their customers.

Todd Thiemann, product specialist at encryption company Vormetric, says, “As we saw with Sony, Stratfor, Zappos and others, hackers value this information and are selling it on a thriving black market to others focused on identity theft.”  “Companies need to rethink how to value and protect customer data.”

On Feb 13, Microsoft took it’s Store India off line after word got out that the site’s customer database had been hacked. A group referring to itself as “Evil Shadow Team” took credit in a blogpost written in Mandarin.

Evil Shadow’s self-proclaimed leader, who refers to himself as 7zl, told Reuters the data had been found unencrypted on the website. On the blog post, 7zl declared himself to be a “patriotic hacker.”

In a statement to Reuters by a Microsoft spokeswoman, she said, the company is “investigating a limited compromise” of the company’s online store in India. “The store customers have already been sent guidance on the issue and suggested immediate actions.” “We are diligently working to remedy the issue and keep our customers protected.”

In addition, the hackers have released user name and password combinations that were saved in plain text by Microsoft. “Storing this data in clear text is playing with fire,” says Thiemann.

I have to ask the obvious question – why wouldn’t this computer giant have (and use) the resources and knowledge to encrypt sensitive data and not store data in clear text? (more…)

Valentine’s Day – A Busy Day for Private Eyes

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

 

Yesterday, I let our readers know that Chicago CBS local news would be covering a story about Valentine’s Day and cheating spouses/partners. CBS 2′s Mai Martinez spent the day with the staff at MSI Detective Services to talk about why Valentine’s Day is such a busy day for private detectives. Martinez also visited the U-Spy Store (owned and operated by MSI Detective Services) for those wishing to purchase their own spy equipment.

If you missed the segment, you can watch the video by clicking on the link to this story at the end.

We expect florists to be busy on Valentine’s Day and candy to fly off the shelves, but did you know it’s also a busy holiday for private investigators?

Forget flowers and chocolates, all some people want for Valentine’s Day is to know if their significant other is cheating.

This is where Perry Myers and his team of private investigators at MSI Detective Services come in.

Theresa Cheriachangel keeps busy with her case load at MSI Detective Services. She said, “A case that I have going on today, she’ll be meeting her … boyfriend for a Valentine’s lunch, and her husband around the same vicinity, actually, for Valentine’s dinner.”

Wow, that is one busy woman. I couldn’t juggle two men let alone keep a straight face. I am a horrible liar.

Private investigators say the above scenario is often the case, making Valentine’s Day one of the best days to catch cheaters.

“As soon as they leave their house, until they come back, we’ll keep an eye on them,” Cheriachangel said.

For those who would rather do the detective work themselves, you can buy some of the same gadgets the pros use such as GPS trackers. “You can actually see where the car is in real time,” said Perry Myers, private detective and owner of MSI Detective Services and the U-Spy Store. (more…)

Tune-In Tonight on Chicago CBS News – Valentine’s Day and Cheating Spouses

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

 

Happy Valentines Day to our readers!

Hopefully, you are one of the happy people who will be celebrating a romantic evening with your partner in a loving, trusting relationship.

For those of you who have your suspicions about your partner’s faithfulness, you may want to watch this evening’s Chicago CBS News.

The President and Owner of the U-Spy Store, Perry Myers, will be giving an interview on the topic of Valentine’s Day and Cheating Spouses.

The segment will air tonight on Chicago CBS News at 5:00 p.m. (CST).

We hope you can join us!

NBC News’ ‘Dateline’ Examines 1999 Murder Conviction

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Last night, I watched Dateline and learned of the Jon-Adrian Velazquez story. Today, his story had made the headlines.

Velazquez, 36, is serving a 25-to-life sentence for killing a retired cop during a botched robbery at an illegal gambling parlor. There was no physical or DNA evidence and Velazquez’s guilt rested largely on the identification of dubious eye-witnesses, one of whom has recanted.

Sadly, there are many stories like this one – innocent people serving time for crimes they did not commit. As one D.A. commented on last night’s program, once you are convicted, it is next to impossible to have that conviction overturned. Even when these cases are reviewed and it’s so obvious the system failed that person, the system does not devote its resources to correcting the wrong.

When Jon-Adrian heard the police wanted to talk to him about the killing of a retired police officer, Albert Ward, he knew there must be some mistake. He voluntarily went to the police station to clear up the confusion and he volunteered to participate in a police lineup. Velazquez was identified by witnesses and to this day is trying to clear up the confusion.

Police set their sights on Velazquez after one witness, Augustus Brown, identified him after spending hours going through 1,800 mugshots. Jon-Adrian was a family man attending school to become a computer programmer. In his younger days, he had been arrested on a minor drug charge. As a result, his picture was on record.

All of the witnesses said the man who killed the retired police officer was a black man with a light complexion and braids. This led police sketch artists to create a wanted poster. When you look at the picture, you can see that the suspect looks nothing like Velazquez. (more…)

Caught On Tape: Girl Fights Off Walmart Kidnapper

Friday, February 10th, 2012

Brittney Baxter is just 7 years old, but she can sure put up a fight. She screamed and kicked her way out of a kidnapping attempt in an Atlanta area Walmart on Wednesday.

The Georgia girl was wandering through the Bremen Walmart toy aisle on when she narrowly escaped being kidnapped by a man police say recently finished a prison sentence. Her mother had stepped away for less than a couple of minutes to go to the fruit section. Within that short time frame, Thomas A. Woods, 25, of Austell, Ga., grabbed Brittney and tried to take her out of the store.

Fortunately, store video captured Woods trying to silence Brittney while she fought back. In an interview with ABC News, Brittney said, “I was screaming and kicking and trying to get away and he put his hand over my mouth.”

The video shows a man, believed to be Woods, approach Baxter and grab her, covering up the girl’s mouth and struggling to subdue her.

Woods decided this wasn’t going to be easy, so he dropped the girl and ran out of the store.

Even better, surveillance cameras outside the store captured Woods getting into his car. This allowed police to put out a detailed alert that resulted in Woods being caught by police. He was caught less than an hour later at his home in Tallapoosa, Ga., which is a town about 10 miles west of the store.

Last October, Woods completed a prison sentence for an involuntary manslaughter conviction dating back to when he was 17 years old. Woods is currently on probation, and claims he had nothing to do with Baxter’s attempted kidnapping. He denies being in the Walmart.

Woods has been charged with attempted kidnapping.

Brittney’s family is grateful their daughter is okay, and happy that she is such a fighter. “I’m very proud of her,” said her dad, Randall Baxter. “I just thank the Lord that she got away.” Brittney’s mother is still understandably very shaken and said she will now be afraid to let her daughter out of her sight.

In the ABC News interview, Brittney was asked if she had any advice to offer other children. Brittney said, “Always scream, try to scream and kick as hard as you can and go get someone you can trust.”

Good advice from Brittney and good for her for fighting back and not allowing herself to become another missing child victim and statistic.

Watch video @ abcnews

Other Source: Huffington Post

Ripple Effects of Supreme Court’s Decision on Warrantless Use of GPS

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

GPS Tracking Device

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that law enforcement officials would need an official court-issued warrant before using GPS technology to track suspected criminals. The Justices unanimously agreed 9-to-0 in their decision after hearing arguments on a case involving a nightclub owner and suspected cocaine dealer in Washington, D.C., whose movements were monitored for roughly 30 days with a GPS tracking device.

FBI and local law enforcement officials had initially obtained a warrant for the GPS tracker but it had expired before they were able to attach the device to the suspect’s vehicle. The suspect was convicted and sentenced to life in prison for cocaine trafficking; however, the decision was later overturned in an appeals court after it was determined that the unwarranted data collected from the GPS tracking device violated his Fourth Amendment rights.

Unwarranted Use of GPS Tracker in Ohio Burglary Case

The Ohio Supreme Court will review an Appeals Court reversal of a Columbus man’s conviction for breaking into a home near Baltimore, Ohio.

David L. White, 24, pleaded no contest in November 2010, to improperly discharging a firearm into or at a habitation, aggravated burglary and aggravated robbery. White was sentenced to 25 years in prison altogether, with 13 years suspended.

He was accused of breaking into a home on January 23, 2010, near Baltimore with co-defendant Montie E. Sullivan. Sullivan, 19, of Columbus, pleaded no contest in October 2010 to one count of improperly discharging a firearm into a habitation and one count of aggravated burglary. He was sentenced to 19 years in prison.

After looting the house, White and Sullivan fled in a vehicle that was being tracked by local law enforcement officials.

Police were able to locate and track the two men to their apartment in Columbus shortly after the crime with the attached GPS tracker.

Prior to the burglary incident, Franklin County detectives had covertly placed a GPS tracking device on Sullivan’s car after they had trouble following it as it drove around Columbus and nearby counties. They suspected him of being in connection with a felony case they were investigating. However, they had not obtained a warrant before installing the GPS tracking device on Sullivan’s white Honda Civic.

On the day of the home invasion, deputies were tracking Sullivan’s car, which they had been tracking for 13 days prior to the invasion, and realized it might have been involved in the Baltimore burglary. Upon receiving news of the incident, police followed the car back to Sullivan’s Columbus home.

When law enforcement officers arrived, White and Sullivan quickly ran out the back door. At the apartment, police found and recovered the property from the Baltimore home invasion.

David White and Montie Sullivan were later captured and indicted by a grand jury. (more…)

Security Camera Video Coding Error Lets Voyeurs See All

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

How would you feel if you installed a security camera video system in your home for protection only to find out your private activities are being viewed live on the internet?

Video feeds from some home user’s Internet security cameras — including children’s rooms and bathroom scenes — are being seen by others around the world because of a coding error that is part of the camera’s software.

I would not want to be the programmer that has to explain this problem.

TrendNet security camera’s flaw was discovered after word of some shared footage spread on various message boards and blogs in the past month.

The BBC reported that messages about the flaw included the following:

“Someone caught a guy in Denmark (traced to ip) getting naked in the bathroom.” Another said: “I think this guy is doing sit-ups.”

One user wrote, “baby spotted,” causing another to comment, “I feel like a pedophile watching this.”

California-based TrendNet told the BBC that it’s in the process of releasing software updates to fix the problem, which it learned about on Jan. 12.

The company is also emailing those owners who registered their cameras. It’s not clear how many are affected. A company spokesman said it could be fewer than 1,000 consumers in the United Kingdom and globally “most likely less than 50,000.”

That’s a lot depending on how many people decide to file lawsuits. With The U.S. being such a litigious society, you can just see the lawsuits mounting now – depending on how many U.S. customers were affected.

Tech website The Verge wrote an extensive report about the exploit last Friday.

The vulnerability was first noted on a Jan. 10th blog said the BBC:

  • The author discovered that after setting up one of the cameras with a password, its video stream became accessible to anyone who typed in the correct net address.
  • In each case, this consisted of the user’s IP address followed by an identical sequence of 15 characters.
  • The writer then showed how the Shodan search engine (which specializes in finding online devices) could be used to discover cameras vulnerable to the flaw.

TrendNet plans to have revised firmware available this week. The company posted the following warning on its website on Monday informing users of the specific camera models and versions that have the flaw:

It is TrendNet’s understanding that video from select TrendNet IP cameras may be accessed online in real time. Upon awareness of the issue, TrendNet initiated immediate actions to correct and publish updated firmware which resolves the vulnerability.

“We are scrambling to discover how the code was introduced and at this point it seems like a coding oversight,” a company spokesman told the BBC.

Read story@ msnbc