[ale] Linux apparently illegal in MA - OT Constitution Rant

Jeff Lightner jlightner at water.com
Thu Apr 23 11:54:08 EDT 2009


Part of the reason I support legalizing drugs even though I don't use
them (other than caffeine and alcohol) is because of the corruption of
our rights put into most drug laws.  They can now "seize" your property
and make you "show cause" why it is should not have been seized.  This
is the exact opposite of what our Constitution provides.  

I once saw a show about profiling in South Carolina where they had the
State Trooper on tape (it was a ride along).  He pulled over an
expensive car driven by African Americans (this was the profile).  He
searched based on the profile and found $3000 in cash.  He seized the
cash saying he suspected it was related to drug trafficking.  Note that
he found no drugs nor were any of the people in the car "high".  It was
all done based on the profile.  

Additionally there was one town where a full 50% of the male population
had been arrested and put in jail over time all on the word of one
informant (who was himself an addict).

Many people will say drugs cause crime and so should be suppressed.
However, in my view the crimes that addicts commit are already illegal.
They should therefore be arrested for those crimes rather than an
activity that has "potential" to cause such crimes.

-----Original Message-----
From: ale-bounces at ale.org [mailto:ale-bounces at ale.org] On Behalf Of Bob
Toxen
Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 7:29 PM
To: Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts - Yes! We run Linux!
Subject: Re: [ale] Linux apparently illegal in MA

1. The reason for the police interest likely was suspicion of a
   "hate crime" against a gay person.  (I don't know what this week's
   definition is in MA.)

2. Data encryption has become popular to hide evidence of crime,
   especially among those handling child pornography.

3. Those who assume that anyone objecting to groundless searches
   or making encryption illegal may want to read the Constitution's
   4th amendment, which reads exactly as:

     The right of the peole to be secure in their persons, houses,
     papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
     shall not be violated and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
     probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly
     describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things
     to be seized.

4. Think you're law abiding?  You are not if any of the following:

   1. You loaned you car to your teenager or your brother in law and he
      or she left drugs in the car and a legal search is conducted.

   2. You have handcuffs to "spice" up your personal life.  That is
      considered part of a "rape kit" and is illegal in Georgia and
      elsewhere.

   3. Your brother-in-law gives a beer to your teenager in your house.

   4. Any of a gazillian other scenarios.

5. Today the Supreme Court upheld the 4th Amendment by decided that
   police no longer can search one's car after they'be been arrested
   and handcuffed (without a warrent).

6. The police can search your "person and your immediate area" to
   allegedly look for a weapon (gun or knife) you might lunge for
   to hurt them.  This is the excuse for many searches.

   They may NOT search areas not immediately accessable, such as a
   locked trunk without a search warrant or probable cause.  Hint, hint.

7. If you have concerns about a search or may be arrested, leave your
   concerns in your car, get out and lock the door behind you and step
   away from your door.  REFUSE TO UNLOCK THE DOOR.  This is NOT
   resisting arrest.  The officer may not enter the vehicle without a
   warrant.  If he breaks the window,  your claim that you did not
   give consent to a search will be very strong.

8. Never, ever give consent to a police officer requesting to search
   your vehicle.  In Georgia they often will ask.  If you say "yes",
   then anything they find of an illegal nature will get you in jail.
   They will threaten to use dogs otherwise that will rip up your car.
   It's an empty bluff, especially if the car is locked!  That search
   warrant problem again.

9. If the police show up at your front door 'cause your party is "too
   loud", do NOT let 'em in.  You don't know what drugs your guests
   have.

   Instead, lock the front door, send a sober guest who does not live
   there out the back door to go around outside to the front door to
   talk with them.  The guest can relay the request to quiet down.
   
   The guest will politely refuse the cops' request to "come in side
   and look around", explaining that since he does not live there he
   does not have the authority to do so.

10. Have a look at:

    FlexYourRights.org

    to learn more.


Bob Toxen
bob at verysecurelinux.com               [Please use for email to me]
http://www.verysecurelinux.com        [Network&Linux security
consulting]
http://www.realworldlinuxsecurity.com [My book:"Real World Linux
Security 2/e"]
Quality spam and virus filters.
Quality Linux & UNIX security and SysAdmin & software consulting since
1990.

"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond where
the shadows lie...and the Eye is everwatching"
-- The Silicon Valley Tarot Henrique Holschuh with ... by Bob

On Sat, Apr 18, 2009 at 05:43:01PM -0400, Robert Reese~ wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 18, 2009 at 02:09, Robert Reese~ <ale at sixit.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Are you suggesting he's in the top 10 people in the entire Boston
> >> area, including those enrolled in CS majors?
> >
> > No.  Apparently they had an interest in him in order to discover
> > him with all his equipment (yes, I'm aware that in itself sounds
> > gay however that wasn't my intention).
> 
> That isn't what you said earlier about him being a Top 10 suspect due
to his 
> skills. ;c)
> 
> But you bring up the interesting question as to WHY they had an
interest in him.  
> According to the affidavit signed by the detective, it boils down to
he 
> allegedly does technologically advanced things with his, and others',
computers.
> 
> And more, part of it really boils down to a very old and incorrect
believe: if 
> someone is using encryption, they must have something illegal to hide.
However, 
> if mystically that were somehow true, the Fourth Amendment gives
protection even 
> in that event.
> 
> 
> >> Yes, I was paying attention, perhaps more than the average person
> >> (but for different reasons).  And it was absolutely moronic back
> >> then; as if a terrorist would plant a brightly-lit,
> >
> > Apparently you weren't paying attention back then.  The devices
> > weren't brightly lit.  The devices were wired with timers to light
> > at a later point in time.
> 
> One focuses on trees, another on the forest.  Doesn't mean that one or
the other 
> wasn't paying attention.  My focus is and was on the impact of civil
liberties; 
> I don't give a rat's ass about protecting the people whilst violating
the 
> Constitution as that is NOT the role of government despite its claims.
> 
> As for the devices, it was obvious to all non-paranoids that the
devices were 
> harmless.  Furthermore, no laws except perhaps trespassing on private
property, 
> were actually broken.  Well, no Constitutionally valid laws, this is.
It was 
> reminiscent of moronic schools administrations with their No Tolerance
stances 
> which lead to such things as expulsions for plastic cutlery and Tweety
Bird 
> wallets with a small chain for clipping onto crystal-clear backpacks
by 
> 11-year-olds.
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/c4hn4h
> <http://tinyurl.com/c4hn4h>
> 
> http://preview.tinyurl.com/c4hn4h
> <http://preview.tinyurl.com/c4hn4h>
> 
>
http://books.google.com/books?id=80rKWMTNTpMC&pg=PA101&lpg=PA101&dq=&sou
rce=bl&o
>
ts=XSzNGC-qoT&sig=bwlDLPL3Yd8uN3redqjjszDc0oI&hl=en&ei=BUbqSfSHItKJtgen6
ISbBg&sa
> =X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6
> 
>
<http://books.google.com/books?id=80rKWMTNTpMC&pg=PA101&lpg=PA101&dq=&so
urce=bl&
>
ots=XSzNGC-qoT&sig=bwlDLPL3Yd8uN3redqjjszDc0oI&hl=en&ei=BUbqSfSHItKJtgen
6ISbBg&s
> a=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6>
> 
> 
> These incidents indicate an increasing banality of our government in
regards to 
> both civil liberties and technology these past few decades and it is
only 
> getting worse regardless of which party is in control.  Time to start
watching 
> our collective technologically-sophisticated backs as government gets
more 
> technologically and common-sensically stupid, or to start running for
office 
> ourselves.
> 
> And in Massachusetts, it seems that Witch Hunting is once again a
favorite 
> past-time....
> 
> Cheers,
> R~
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Ale mailing list
> Ale at ale.org
> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
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