7. GPS Tracking
Not content with high tech tapping of your smart devices, the FBI has also been guilty of “tapping” vehicle,s too. In 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit passed a law allowing government agents to sneak onto your property and put a GPS device in your car. This would have sounded like something out of a B-rated spy flick, until San Jose college student, Yasir Afifi, found one under his car in October 2010. Initially thinking it was a bomb, it was soon identified to be a tracking device sold exclusively to law enforcement agencies.
He had been under surveillance for up to six weeks, simply because he was the son of Aladdin Afifi, an Islamic-American community leader. Before he could sell the device on Craigslist, FBI agents turned up at his home and requested that he give it back. He gave it back, but sued the agency in 2011. The fallout from the case led to a 2012 Supreme Court ruling that mandated a warrant before bugging a suspect’s vehicle.
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