Should Police Be Arrested For Illegal Hacking For Setting Up Fake Facebook Profile?

from the we-should-be-fair,-right? dept

In the Lori Drew case, she was convicted for “computer hacking” because she violated MySpace’s terms of service by setting up a profile of a fake person. And for this, she deserves years in jail? Well, if that’s the case, reader Roni Evron wants to know if some police officers are going to face the same charges after they set up a fake Facebook profile in order to bust up an after-prom high school party. Apparently, they set up a fake Facebook profile and friended a bunch of the kids at school, who apparently were “cavalier about accepting people into their network of friends.” That, of course, is fine… but it’s basically the same thing that Drew was arrested and convicted of doing.

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Comments on “Should Police Be Arrested For Illegal Hacking For Setting Up Fake Facebook Profile?”

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68 Comments
Ryan Radia (user link) says:

Re: Isn't this entrapment?

Probably not. Unless the police induced the teenagers to do something they wouldn’t have otherwise done, chances are an entrapment defense would fail. The police could, however, be sued by Facebook for deliberate misuse of Facebook’s service and knowingly violating Facebook’s terms of service. Assuming the police themselves have admitted to creating fake identities, unless they had Facebook’s permission, Facebook might have a good case.

The infamous Joe says:

Re: Re:

I know you were just being sarcastic, but wasn’t Drew thinking of *her* child when she made (or had made for her?) that MySpace page?

So, is there a minimum number of children you have to be thinking about before “hacking” a social media site is okay?

Typing that last sentence kinda made me feel dirty.

Ryan says:

Apparently, they set up a fake Facebook profile and friended a bunch of the kids at school, who apparently were “cavalier about accepting people into their network of friends.” That, of course, is fine…

I find it repulsive that any educated person could shrug this behavior off as “fine”. These dipshit cops had nothing better to do than to go far out of their way in setting up a sting operation for a frickin’ high school prom party?? While Lori Drew’s actions had more unfortunate consequences, I personally find the cops’ actions to be considerably more despicable given their power and responsibility to the public, which they have abused horribly to no evident benefit but to be able to harm the lives of a bunch of young teenagers happy to be graduating from high school.

Thinking this sort of stuff is “fine” is the next step along the way to an official Gestapo-esque thought police…

dan says:

Re: children drunk killed

Wonder what you would say if children were killed because they were trashed.
1). O.D. on booze, happens all the time.
2). Fall over balcony’s and die. Again, happens all the time.
3). Killed in car accident. Car meats tree, tree wins.

but, I bet you don’t care how many kid’s die. They shouldn’t be given a chance to a longer life and not making the mistakes we made.

fuck off and dye Ryan, because thats all you are wishing on the children by your bull shit fucking attitude.

mklinker says:

Re: Re: children drunk killed

Except he wasn’t such a prick about it! And, I have to believe that kids today will survive their prom just as kids for the last couple generations have. This atitude of protecting the children from possible harm does not teach them how to react when in a similar situation later in life. By your arguement we’d have kids setting off to college before doing these crazy things, or is that too early – maybe we should protect them until the graduate. Well, that still leaves many years, maybe we should protect them until retirement…. let the damn kids live before saying we don’t care about their life!

BTR1701 says:

Re: Re: children drunk killed

> Wonder what you would say if children were
> killed because they were trashed.

I’d say that’s too bad, but that’s life. You make choices and sometimes they’re bad ones and bad things happen.

> Car meats tree, tree wins.

It’s “meets”, not “meats”.

> bet you don’t care how many kid’s die

It’s “kids” not “kid’s”.

> They shouldn’t be given a chance to a longer
> life and not making the mistakes we made.

This sentence makes absolutely no linguistic sense. Is English your second language?

> fuck off and dye Ryan

It’s “die”, not “dye” – unless you’re suggesting he go dip himself in some kind of colored stain.

Seems like you could do with a little more high-schoolin’ yourself.

Rob (profile) says:

Well… it’s a good thing that we live in a world with such little serious crime that the police can spend time and resources setting up an elaborate sting to keep some high school kids from (gasp!) drinking. I for one know that I will be sleeping a little more soundly tonight knowing that the police are willing to do whatever is necessary and use whatever resources are necessary in this time of economic prosperity to prevent such heinous crimes from happening in the future. After all, this really is for the children…

Anonymous Coward says:

So these kids were talking about a party they were having and now people are upset because the cops learned about the party through Myspace?

Here is a hint, if you are going to break the law, don’t talk about your plans on Myspace.

Ryan, they didn’t set up a sting, they just read about where the party was going to be, its not like they said they were throwing a party for underage people and arrested who showed up.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Sorry to inform you but under age drinkers do not get arrested. If they are over 18 the cops do nothing. If they are under 18 they take them in and have the parrents pick them up.

The big thing is the owner of the house gets a fine per kid for contributing to a minor even if they did not know about it or supply the alcohol.

I know this because some thing similar happened at a party just after graduation when I was 18.

dan says:

Re: Re: Re:

really? So the parents did not have to come and pick up the children when the party was busted? They were allowed to drive home in what ever condition they were in. Sureeeee.

Sorry, I don’t agree. Those kids would have been taken off the streets that night. Thankfully, not in jail. But home where they would have a MUCH better chance at survival.

Thwaaack says:

Absolutely, they should be arrested

Legal precedent, as it currently stands, says that they broke the law. They should do the same for the “Dateline” people and any other “concerned citizen” that poses as a minor to catch sexual predators. NOT because I think these people should not be doing what they are doing, but because Lori Drew was convicted on an emotional response to her actions, and not unbiased interpretation of the law. If we were to throw every person who violated a website’s TOS into jail with the maximum penalty, as the prosecutors in the Drew case wish to do, this would quickly resolve this abortion of the law. Lori Drew didn’t hack anything, she just lied about who she was, and used that persona to torment an emotionally and mentally fragile little girl. If the girl’s parents were better parents, they would have seen what was going on and gotten her help, instead of letting others raise their children. There is absolutely no proof of causality in this case. For all we know, the kid could have committed suicide even if she never talked to the persona invented by Drew.

Anonymous Coward says:

… but it’s basically the same thing that Drew was arrested and convicted of doing.

My God…talk about talking out of both sides of one’s mouth. One the one hand it is said that internet sites are a good way for law enforcement to monitor the potential for criminal activity. Now it seems that by doing so they should be deemed guilty of engaging in illegl activity.

Sorry, but to compare Ms. Drew’s case with this activity is so far off the mark it astounds me.

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re:

My God…talk about talking out of both sides of one’s mouth. One the one hand it is said that internet sites are a good way for law enforcement to monitor the potential for criminal activity. Now it seems that by doing so they should be deemed guilty of engaging in illegl activity.

Heh. Way to miss the point. I don’t think it’s illegal. I’m pointing out that if you think what Drew did was illegal, then this should be illegal… Get it?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Get it?

Of course, except for the fact that Ms. Drew was charged with using a false identity to gain access to a site in order to commit an intentional tort…the intentional infliction of severe emotional distress. Several felony counts were alleged in the indictment, but in the end the jury elected to convict her on lesser included misdemeanor counts, and was unable to achieve unanimity on at least one count of criminal conspiracy.

Without a doubt Ms. Drew will be sued (if she already has not) by the parents of the young girl in a civil action including, inter alia, intentional infliction of emotional distress, wrongful death, etc. I would not hold my breath that she will be found not liable under the law.

The civil case notwithstanding, a criminal indictment was certainly not unexpected, though the statute utilized was unusual in the sense that it was a matter of first impression before the court. Will the conviction stand up when it is most certainly appealled is a matter of debate within legal circles, but clearly there is no overwhelming consensus that her conviction will be overturned.

It does bear mentioning that at this point in time the court has before it a motion for the conviction to be vacated. If it is vacated the government will likely appeal. If it is not the defendant will likely appeal. No matter what happens, this criminal case is far from over.

BTR1701 says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

> Ms. Drew was charged with using a false
> identity to gain access to a site in order
> to commit an intentional tort.

That’s not what she was charged with at all. She was charged with using a false identity in violation of the web site’s Terms of Service. Nothing in her charging document even mentions intentional torts, nor are they an element of the crime. (Nor could they be because torts are civil wrongs, not criminal wrongs.)

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: Re:

Swing and a miss.

The Drew case was about a violation of the terms of service witch turned into a hacking charge. Drew created (or had created for her) a fake MySpace page and that is the only thing she was accused of (under the law).

The cops created a fake MySpace page. They lied about who they were and what they were doing. It’s the same damn thing (under the law) as the Drew case.

I keep adding “under the law” because the law is suppose to be blind. Thus, Drew was sentenced exclusively for violating the terms of service, nothing else.

chris (profile) says:

Re: Re:

My God…talk about talking out of both sides of one’s mouth. One the one hand it is said that internet sites are a good way for law enforcement to monitor the potential for criminal activity. Now it seems that by doing so they should be deemed guilty of engaging in illegl activity.

the point isn’t that the cops broke the “law”. the point is that now that thanks to the judicial travesty that was the lori drew case, the cops have now broken the law.

cops setting up a sting to catch teenagers via facebook is super lame, but being lame shouldn’t be illegal.

Justin says:

Something to think about

I never thought of it this way, but now don’t all the To catch a Predator people have a way out of their sentence. if the action to catch them is deemed illegal all the evidence used to convict them is now tainted and unusable, basically they have nothing. It is nice to see that people think of the whole picture before they make a dumbass emotional interpretation of the law rather then anything close to the correct one.

Challanging the evidence says:

As no prosecutor would ever go after these police officers using the same reasoning, we can argue how they should, but nothing will happen.

However, defense attorneys should be able to say that this method of gathering evidence is criminal, and I would assume that they can get any evidence obtain from a fake profile (in a case like this, or in a case similar to what was done on Dateline)to be declared as illegal.

Steve R. (profile) says:

Moral Duplicity

Here’s another one, what is the difference between strip searching a 13 year old girl on an allegation of misconduct and an ISP strip searching your packets on their own volition and without a warrant looking for contraband?

The New York Times screams moral outrage when it comes to strip searching a 13 year old girl based on a false accusation but then is silent concerning demands by the content industry that ISPs “filter” internet traffic without any due process or even probable cause. Seems to me that the concept of “justice” for the Times is a matter or perspective and not law.

Please see: Piracy and the Legal System

The infamous Joe says:

Re: Re:

I was in the Military and I can tell you that we were not only under the civilian laws, but also the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), so instead of being above the law, we were actually under about twice the laws as most people. (and being charged with a civilian law does not prevent you from being charged with the military equivalent!)

Not only that, but it seemed to me that I got punished harder for the things I did because I “represent the country”.

Also, I am friends with a few cops and I’d say that they aren’t any more or less corrupt than the rest of us.. with exceptions on either side, of course.

Politicans– yeah, they’re all corrupt, as far as I can tell.

Not that it has any bearing on the focus of your rant, I just wanted to set the record straight.

Bob V says:

Undercover?

So what happens if a cop is undercover and creates an email/social network/ whatever account under that identity.

I know what you are saying and agree that it was a travesty to charge her with hacking offencess, but seriously isn’t there isn’t a better example somewhere other than cops doing their jobs.

Chronno S. Trigger says:

Re: You are sheep

No, we’re actually calling for the Drew case to be overturned. She is not a hacker, and that ruling is an insult to true hackers. Let her get sued into the ground with a wrongful death suit (and final judgment for those religious people). Don’t twist the law into something that can, and will be, used against the cops so some damn pedophile can get out of a true conviction. Using a fake profile is fine, creating a precedence that a fake profile is against the law is not.

You call us sheep, I call you a sheep for following the emotional flash mob that cropped up. Or maybe you’re calling us sheep because we try to follow the original ideals that were setup at the beginning, like freedom from wrongful prosecution (and having blind justice, that kind of thing).

Lets be real says:

Internet Stings

When Law Enforcement took their cues from perverted justice they simply forgot a few things, for example the LAW. Lots of states have unlawful computer hacking statutes. There is no provision that it is okay for LE but not okay for joe public. The websites do not have a special provision for LE officers. Why is LE spending their time in sexually charged adult rooms that require people to be over 18? Pretending to be a lost teenager in a room that people are role playing in. Hmmm because of the nature of the internet and the anonymity someone would be more likely to talk to someone that merely says they are a certain age. This is not like walking into a mall. The other thing that is common in these chat rooms is cybersex where people type stuff about sex. It is time that the country be educated on internet stings. Notice they never tell you it was in an ADULT ROOM 18 YEARS OR OLDER……

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