Police Can Create Fake Instagram Accounts To Investigate Suspects

According to a recent opinion passed down by district court
judge William Martini in New Jersey, it is 100 percent legal for a police
officer to create a fake Instagram account, friend you, and use evidence found
in your Instagram feed against you, should you get yourself into the kind of
mess that requires such an investigation. No search warrant necessary.
ArsTechnica reports that the decision came down when Daniel
Gatson, the leader of a jewelry theft ring that was busted by the FBI in 2013,
buddied up with new Instagram friends, who were actually undercover cops trying
to secure evidence against him.
Gatson posted some of his loot on Instagram, presumably
thinking that his privacy settings (which require friend requests before anyone
can see his feed) would keep him safe. The police simply created a fake account
and asked to be Gatson’s friend. The judge ruled that, because Gatson had
willingly accepted the police friend request, the evidence found on the
Instagram account was sturdy enough to get a search warrant for Gatson’s home.
The Verge makes a good point: If Instagram was a “real-name”
social media network (like Facebook), then the police accounts would at least
have to use real names, rather than sneaking in as some random, thief-loving
Instagram user.
This is just one in a long string of cases in which
officials are trying to figure out how social media accounts can and will
factor into various investigations and criminal proceedings in court. However,
the lesson itself is something we’ve been struggling with since the birth of
the internet itself.
What you share online is never really private, no matter
what your account settings say.
source: TechCrunch
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