Keith Devens .com |
Friday, March 19, 2010 | ![]() |
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Peggy McGilligan (http://web.mac.com/writecoast/iWeb/Site/Blog/Blog.html) wrote:
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Way to go Pat; knock 'em dead. While there's no law per se against a private citizen gathering evidence, people do things everyday for which they might be held to account. Not that Governor Palin is among them. I’d expect to find nothing incriminating. Citizens do have rights though, the right to be secure in their papers among them. Due to the electronic medium, the Sarah Palin case should be groundbreaking. Here’s something for the less technologically inclined: whenever one’s cell phone is switched on, not necessarily making a call, just turned on, that even if it's not a GPS enabled device, it emits a signal that anyone who knows your SIM card number may track with an array of inexpensive software. GOOGLE GPS tracking devices. The phone’s speaker can also be remotely activated for use as a listening device. Perhaps you’re wondering, as did I, how certain individuals seem to know your whereabouts, or manage to show up when and where they do. High tech and tech devices lend the good, the bad & the ugly a level of sophistication hitherto unimagined. Cell phone option: remove battery when not in use: http://theseedsof9-11.com