TSA now allowed to take laptops from you

by Devilsnok 24 Replies latest jw friends

  • Devilsnok
    Devilsnok

    Not content with taking your shoes and confiscating your water, now the Department of Homeland Security is gunning for your laptops. As the Washington Post reported yesterday, Border Patrol and Customs agents can now “detain” laptops “for a reasonable period of time” to “review and analyze information.” They don’t need probable cause under the new policy. Doesn’t matter if you’re a U.S. citizen or foreign visitor. Officials can hold the laptops indefinitely. Or hard drives, flash drives, cellphones, iPods, pagers, beepers, video and audio tapes. Ditto papers, documents, books, pamphlets, even litter.

    “It’s not our intent to subject legitimate travelers to undue scrutiny, but to ensure the safety of the American public,” wrote Jayson Ahern, U.S. Customs deputy commissioner, in a recent policy paper. Arguing that border searches of laptops have already uncovered intellectual property rights violations, extremist Jihadist literature, video clips of IEDs and child pornography, he pledged the government would never disclose confidential information “without lawful authority.” The policy has been on the books for awhile, but just confirmed under pressure from civil rights and business groups worried about increasing reports of laptop confiscation.

    Source: LA Times

    America really is becoming a big brother state!

  • Hope4Others
    Hope4Others

    My goodness, who wants to take anything with them if you have to deal with something
    like that...and get it back when...that's way to controlling where are American freedoms going to go!

    h40

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    Fortress america.

    S

  • Gopher
    Gopher

    Hey Devilsnok -- if you liked that TSA/laptops story, maybe you'll love this one:

    How about a little warrantless search and seizure for you? It's all part of a day in the life of George W. Bush's America!

    http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?StoryID=78337

    FBI seizes library computers

    Originally published August 03, 2008


    By Comfort Dorn and Adam Behsudi
    News-Post Staff

    FBI agents removed two computers from the C. Burr Artz Public Library in Frederick this week, according to Darrell Batson, director of Frederick County Public Libraries. The FBI removed computer records from the C. Burr Artz Library this week, a library official confirmed Saturday. Darrell Batson, director of Frederick County Public Libraries, said two FBI employees came to the downtown Frederick library either Wednesday or Thursday. The agents removed two public computers from the library's second floor. They told him they were taking the units back to their office in Washington, D.C., Batson said. Batson expected the computers would be returned early this week, he said. Debbie Weierman, spokeswoman for the FBI's Washington field office, would not comment Saturday on whether the agency had removed records from the library. This was the third time in his 10 years with FCPL that the FBI has come to the library seeking records, Batson said. It was the first time they came without a court order. The library's procedure for such requests usually requires a court order, however after the agent described the case and the situation, he was persuaded to give them access, Batson said.

    "They had an awful lot of information," he said, but he was not allowed to discuss specifics.

    "It was a decision I made on my experience and the information given to me," he said.

    C. Burr Artz Library has several dozen public computers. The agents seemed to know which ones they needed access to, he said.

    Anyone with a library card and a PIN number can use FCPL computers. Without a library card, a person can get a temporary pass to go online.

    Batson said the agents made no mention of Bruce Ivins, anthrax or Fort Detrick.

    "Obviously it coincided with the events everyone is talking about," he said.

  • Tired of the Hypocrisy
    Tired of the Hypocrisy

    Whaddya bet there are some tsa agents with flash drives of their own and would copy my porn????

  • VM44
    VM44

    There is the matter of the US Constitution's Bill of Rights

    Amendment IV

    The right of the people 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.

  • VM44
    VM44

    The United States just doesn't want to follow the intent of its own Constitution, does it?

  • VM44
    VM44

    America is the Land of the Free?

  • amicus
    amicus

    Honestly, I'm reminded of why the US reluctantly seperated from the British Empire.

    Our government has become as haughty as King George and his parliament in the late 1700's.

    Historians will eventually look back on this time as another perfect storm of failed government.

  • Mulan
    Mulan

    We just got home tonight from two weeks in Hawaii. When we were going through security in Honolulu, before boarding our flight home, they took Dave's water bottle.!! Oh the shame.

    Last year, we could take water through security, but this year they caught up to the rest of the nation............no water!

    Laptop confiscation seems so wrong to me. I do understand taking a water bottle, because it might contain something other than water, but your laptop is a pretty expensive thing to take from you.

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