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FBI can’t cut Internet and pose as cable guy to search property, judge says

Posted on April 20, 2015June 30, 2025 by Dissent

David Kravets reports the latest development in a case previously noted on this site:

A federal judge issued a stern rebuke Friday to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s method for breaking up an illegal online betting ring. The Las Vegas court frowned on the FBI’s ruse of disconnecting Internet access to $25,000-per-night villas at Caesar’s Palace Hotel and Casino. FBI agents posed as the cable guy and secretly searched the premises.

The government claimed the search was legal because the suspects invited the agents into the room to fix the Internet. US District Judge Andrew P. Gordon wasn’t buying it. He ruled that if the government could get away with such tactics like those they used to nab gambling kingpin Paul Phua and some of his associates, then the government would have carte blanche power to search just about any property.

Read more on Ars Technica.

Thanks to Joe Cadillic for this link.

 

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