Police Under Fire For Using Anti-Terrorism Device To Track Sandwich Thief

(Image Via Jenny Yermit)

Police officers take food very seriously, so if you rip off one of their favorite eateries expect to have the full force of the law brought down upon you, even if all you stole were wings and sub sandwiches.

A hungry crook in Annapolis, Maryland stole 15 chicken wings and 3 sub sandwiches (total value $56.77) from a pizza shop employee on a delivery run and the police are now under fire for using a Stingray phone tracker to hunt the thief.

(Image Link)

The Stingray is a small device that acts like a portable cell phone tower, allowing police officers to capture info from nearby mobile devices and therefore tramples all over our right to privacy.

This device is typically only used to track terrorists, and yet the Baltimore police department has used it more than 4,300 times since 2007, which is causing some courtroom controversy in Maryland.

The Annapolis police didn't catch the sandwich thief, so using a Stingray was not only an abuse of their power- it was one of the most expensive operations ever mounted to catch a guy who stole some wings and subs.

-Via Business Insider

We dish up more neat food posts at the Neatolicious blog

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"This device is typically only used to track terrorists, and yet the Baltimore police department has used it more than 4,300 times since 2007". So it is hardly ever used to track terrorists and mostly used to trample on our rights. Law enforcement cannot be trusted with this kind of technology without oversight.
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