Settings

Theme

How a man accused of fraud uncovered the Stingray surveillance device

theverge.com

85 points by kanche 10 years ago · 12 comments

Reader

brazzledazzle 10 years ago

I can't believe it's possible to waive your right to appeal. That seems unconscionable.

  • ck2 10 years ago

    Also, every single day public defenders waive the right to a speedy trial on behalf of their clients before those people even know what is happening or what is being done.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=public+defenders+waive+right...

    You know, that pesky sixth amendment that was so important.

    • frandroid 10 years ago

      Because otherwise the client will be in jail before their lawyers know what's happening because the prosecution had all the time in the world to prepare their case before laying down charges, and overworked public defenders need time to build a case to defend an already built case?

      • ck2 10 years ago

        The state often has near unlimited resources to prosecute a case, if given extended time they can come up with all sorts of things.

        Speedy trials protect the defendant from rotting in jail without charge for years which is happening more and more now.

    • CPLX 10 years ago

      Waiving speedy trial can be strategic. Sometimes time is on the side of the defense sometimes it isn't.

      The whole point of a right is that it's generally optional for the person who's right it is.

      You have the right to remain silent and the right to speak freely. Those two rights aren't in conflict.

      • FireBeyond 10 years ago

        Yes, but in more and more cases it's being done without the knowledge or agreement of the client, but to minimize load on public defenders.

  • CPLX 10 years ago

    Of course you can waive your right to appeal. It's a settlement. You waive lots of stuff in a plea, also your fourth amendment rights via allocution typically.

    • x1798DE 10 years ago

      I agree that it's not necessarily unconscionable to allow this, but I'm curious about appeals on grounds of legal malpractice - if the lawyer who crafted your "no appeals" deal was on violation of their fiduciary duty, can you appeal the court's acceptance of the plea bargain?

  • fweespeech 10 years ago

    Why?

    Its a deal that ends the legal proceeding permanently.

    • brazzledazzle 10 years ago

      Perhaps this is an exception to it, but what if information comes to light that completely invalidates their case and proves that you're innocent?

      • fweespeech 10 years ago

        You've admitted guilt with full knowledge of the legal consequences, while advised by an attorney [unless you self-represent and fire your public defender].

        I'd say its the one situation where, yes, it isn't going to be 100% perfect but trying to "improve" it will likely have collateral damage.

SFjulie1 10 years ago

So basically the journalist is amazed by the "weakness" of radio signal... which is it can be (either in reception or in emission) localized by triangulation ...

Wahou! A great re-discovery of how our two ears can localize the sound of anything.

(I will let people search by themselves a little bit on how a RADIO receptor can also be tracked with radio triangulation, emission is trivial. It implies you can create stingray detectors with a big enough budget... ouch)

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection