Facebook Warns Memphis Police: No More Fake "Bob Smith" Accounts:
Facebook has a problem: an infestation of undercover cops. Despite the social platform's explicit rules that the use of fake profiles by anyone—police included—is a violation of terms of service, the issue proliferates. While the scope is difficult to measure, EFF has identified scores of agencies who maintain policies that explicitly flout these rules.
Hopefully—and perhaps this is overly optimistic—this is about to change, with a new warning Facebook has sent to the Memphis Police Department. The company has also updated its law enforcement guidelines to highlight the prohibition on fake accounts.
This summer, the criminal justice news outlet The Appeal reported on an alarming detail revealed in a civil rights lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Tennessee against the Memphis Police Department. The lawsuit uncovered evidence that the police used what they referred to as a "Bob Smith" account to befriend and gather intelligence on activists. Following the report, EFF contacted Facebook, which deactivated that account. Facebook has since identified and deactivated six other fake accounts managed by Memphis police that were previously unknown.
(Score: 2) by DaTrueDave on Friday September 28 2018, @03:08AM (2 children)
You seem to be confusing entrapment with undercover operations.
The situation being discussed is related to undercover operations, where a cop establishes some sort of fake persona, in order to infiltrate criminal operations. Entrapment is when the police do something to entice someone to break the law, who otherwise would never have broken that law.
Those are very different things, and entrapment is rarely seen in the United States. The closest thing you might see is a honeypot, where the cops set up an easy way for people to break the law (buy drugs or kiddie porn or prostitutes, or whatever). If they advertise too blatantly, and a judge thinks that the police threw it in someone's face instead of someone seeking it out, then it may be entrapment.
(Score: 5, Interesting) by Spamalope on Friday September 28 2018, @03:50AM
You know, after the last police beating I witnessed I'm really not going to accept anything like that would actually result unless both the lack of accountability and the arrangement that built it this way are meaningfully fixed. If police misconduct and corruption is so rampant that someone as milktoast as me has seen what I've seen, there is a fundamental problem. It shouldn't be this way, and doesn't have to be.
Last one I saw - well, I can say they are learning. Some folks were criminally looking too hippy. Officers waited until they moved to a spot on the street where the street light was out under a tree. Cell phone cameras won't work there don't yah know. Then they batonned the preppie unrelated college kid for being there with an SLR that could get those pics (this was NOLA - so he was probably there for boobie pics), then started with the real beatdown. Watched an officer in a patrol car who was too late for the fun and I guess mad about it swerve across 3 lanes to try and hit a couple crossing the road nearby (the couple had the 'walk' sign and the officer had a red light, which he ran, and did not have his lights on). As a nerdy, white bread, milktoast guy I shouldn't have the stories I have - and wouldn't if things were healthy.
So no, I don't want to give the folks who think that's a good idea the ability to easily spy on anyone from their chair without oversight or accountability. Not that FB is a good actor in any fashion.
(Score: 5, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Friday September 28 2018, @02:34PM
I'm not real sure about that. Remember those Muslims in Syracuse? Pretty much everyone who knew them agreed that the bunch of them didn't have the brains to build a bomb, lacked the savvy to come up with any kind of meaningful target, and probably couldn't even find their way to a target if they had one. I watched the documentary, with a healthy skepticism, but really, those guys weren't smart enough to pour piss out of their boots, if the instructions were written on the bottom. But, the FBI made headlines with their big terrorist bust.
What you're calling a honeypot should be deemed entrapment. If the cop has the drugs, and he's apparently selling them, he has broken a number of laws, including solicitation. But, cops never get charged for all the illegal crap they do.
Honeypot or entrapment, either way, it's a tool of a police state. I don't have much liking for police states.