Groups | Search | Server Info | Login | Register


Groups > alt.comp.hardware.amd.x86-64 > #3

Comey FBI Actively Cultivated Informants in Best Buy's Geek Squad

From You Go President Trump! <choke.on.it.dems@cnn.com>
Subject Comey FBI Actively Cultivated Informants in Best Buy's Geek Squad
Message-ID <0ca2eb29ce6d26d656eafb4eb453c309@dizum.com> (permalink)
Date 2017-09-14 01:25 +0200
Newsgroups alt.comp.hardware.amd.x86-64, alt.comp.linux, alt.true-crime, alt.politics.bush, alt.journalism.newspapers
Organization dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider

Cross-posted to 5 groups.

Show all headers | View raw


Check out this slimeball.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/justinmeade1

Geek Squad supervisor Justin Meade
Deputy Field Marshal at The Geek Squad
Greater Philadelphia AreaInformation Technology and Services
Current
Geek Squad
Previous
Geek Squad, Best Buy
Education
DeVry University
Recommendations	3 people have recommended Justin

https://media.licdn.com/mpr/mpr/shrinknp_200_200/p/6/000/282/36a
/124ae15.jpg

New federal court filings analyzed by the Orange County Weekly 
reveal a deeper relationship than previously understood between 
the FBI and members of Best Buy’s Geek Squad. The documents 
include information about the long-term training and management 
of Geek Squad staff as FBI informants, who used their access to 
customers’ computers to actively search for illegal material, 
primarily child pornography.

The FBI had previously acknowledged a program that paid Best Buy 
employees $500 for tips about child pornography. Even that 
arrangement was alarming from a civil liberties and privacy 
perspective, but it was apparently only the tip of the iceberg. 
OC Weekly’s R. Scott Moxley characterizes the more extensive 
program shown in the new filings as an effort “to sidestep the 
U.S. Constitution’s prohibition against warrantless invasions of 
private property.”

Rather than just offering one-off rewards for tips, the FBI 
appears to have cultivated ongoing relationships with some Geek 
Squad staffers. OC Weekly particularly highlights the case of 
Geek Squad supervisor Justin Meade, who according to the FBI 
documents received "assignments" and provided “valuable 
information” consistently over “several years” thanks to his 
“excellent and frequent” access to the computers of Best Buy 
customers. Some FBI agents wanted to "schedule regular meetings" 
with Meade, and for him to be “tasked” to do even more searches.

The documents also reportedly show that the FBI made plans to 
train Geek Squad staff to recognize the sorts of images the FBI 
wanted them to look for on customers’ computers, and Best Buy 
staffers even contemplated ways to automate their searches. The 
program was apparently not confined to California, as one memo 
makes reference to a "close liaison" between the FBI and Geek 
Squad management in Louisville, Kentucky.

The documents, which Fortune has not seen directly, were entered 
into evidence by a defense attorney in the troubled prosecution 
of a California doctor accused of possessing child pornography. 
The material in question was initially discovered by a Geek 
Squad technician servicing the doctor's computer in 2011. The 
defense has argued that Geek Squad staff were acting as de facto 
government agents, making any evidence they uncovered without a 
warrant inadmissible.

While Best Buy in a January statement acknowledged its 
obligation to report illegal material discovered “in the normal 
course of servicing a computer, phone or tablet,” it has denied 
cooperating with the FBI in searching customers’ computers. In 
January, a spokesperson said that staffers accepting payment 
from authorities to inform on customers “would violate company 
policy,” calling it “purely poor individual judgment.”Though the 
new documents refer to contact between the FBI and Geek Squad 
“management,” it would be surprising if this meant corporate-
level leaders. Best Buy, much like Apple and other technology 
companies, has a strong business motivation to protect customer 
privacy.

The Geek Squad has been described by Best Buy leadership as a 
key part of the chain’s survival as a retailer in the age of 
Amazon, and public awareness that the friendly mobile IT support 
team could also be FBI snoops would be nothing short of 
devastating to that strategy.

http://fortune.com/2017/03/12/rbi-best-buy-geek-squad/
      

Back to alt.comp.hardware.amd.x86-64 | Previous | Next | Find similar


Thread

Comey FBI Actively Cultivated Informants in Best Buy's Geek Squad You Go President Trump! <choke.on.it.dems@cnn.com> - 2017-09-14 01:25 +0200

csiph-web