Senate wants more answers from feds about fake cell towers, other devices that collect smartphone data
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The
Senate Judiciary Committee wants more answers about law enforcement
agencies across the country deploying surveillance technology, including
trick cellphone towers, that gather cellphone data, according to a
letter obtained Thursday by FoxNews.com The bipartisan letter was sent
to the departments of Justice and Homeland Security, following a recent
FBI policy change regarding search warrants that committee leaders say
raises questions about privacy protections and how the equipment was
used. Among the tools singled out in the letter is a Stingray, a device
that pretends it is a cellphone tower and tricks cellphones into
identifying some of their owners’ account information. In addition, the
U.S. Marshal Service is deploying an airborne device — called a “DRT
box” or “dirtbox” — from five metropolitan-area airports across the
United States that also “mimic standard cell towers, forcing affected
cell phones to reveal their approximate location and registration
information,” the Dec. 23 letter states. “It remains unclear how other
agencies within the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland
Security make use of cell-site simulators and what policies are in place
to govern their use of that technology,” states the letter from Vermont
Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy, the committee chairman, and Iowa Sen.
Chuck Grassley, the top Republican on the committee, reported first by
The Associated Press.
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