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| Based on presentation from both Sprint and Verizon at an Investigator school and from my own experience, sometimes a grand Jury subpoena works and sometimes you need a court order.
Basic info like whose phone it is, how they pay their bill and who they have called or calls them (detail calls) can be obtained with a GJ subpoena. BUT - if you want text messages, voice messages, email messages, internet records, camera phone records, and perhaps cell site info, or you want to track a phone as it's being used, things that involve electronic communication I beleive it's ECPA (Electronic Communication Privacy Act) that controls what it takes to get this info which is the Article that your investigator is referring too.
From my own experience a few years ago...had a juvenile intox manslaughter case. Defendant and victim, both juveniles, had been drinking when defendant wrecks his truck and kills victim. Since both were juveniles we needed to find out where they had been, where they got alcohol,who was there and saw def. drinking, etc. Defendant wasn't talking. Victim's cell phone was found by the officer at the scene and showed 27 messages on the phone, but we had no password to get to those. Additionally it was a pre-paid phone not in the victim's name. After much discussion with AT&T attorneys, we got a court order for them to release the messages to us. A Grand Jury subpoena was not sufficient because those are conversations with expectation of privacy.
Email me if you want the info provided by these companies and for more ECPA info, check with Ted Wilson from Harris County. |
| Posts: 90 | Location: Georgetown, TX | Registered: October 03, 2001 |  
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| The good people at NDAA - APRI have a downloadable mini-manual or two that might prove helpful in deciding when, and for what, to use a GJ subpoena or a court order. Here is the link to their publications page: http://www.ndaa.org/publications/apri/wwc_publications.htmlA court order is also the ONLY way you can obtain "future" information, for example, you have a ongoing investigation requiring constant monitoring of a suspect's cell phone for location tracking, messaging, etc. A court order to preserve and provide immediately can give you access to real-time data. |
| Posts: 47 | Location: Dumas, Tx | Registered: March 08, 2001 |  
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| Has anyone made use of art. 18.21, sec. 4(b)(5) and sec. 5(a) yet? If you have a sample court order or other thoughts, please let me know by private message. |
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