Police use social networks, fake profiles in investigations
Industry Standard - If you happen to accept every friend invitation you receive on Facebook or MySpace, you may want to start rethinking what types of information you show to your friends. Some of those people friending you may actually be law enforcement officials looking for incriminating evidence.
Boston Globe reporter Julie Masis contacted 14 Boston-area law enforcement agencies, and over half revealed that they use social networking sites to collect evidence ranging from discussions of illegal activities to photographic evidence of crimes, including underage drinking and vandalism. The Massachusetts Office of the Commissioner of Probation even checks profiles of youth offenders for evidence of probation violations (or plans to violate probation).
Because of current privacy laws (or lack thereof), police can even create a fake profile to gain access to information. While social networking sites say that creating a false profile is against the Terms of Service, if a user voluntarily gives a law enforcement official access to his profile, it's the same as allowing any stranger into your house without a search warrant.
Most users probably have nothing to hide, and not all local police departments are even Web-savvy enough to use social networks in this manner. But you may want to rethink posting pictures of that senior day kegger on your profile. Or accepting that friend request.
Reprinted with permission from
Story Copyright 2009 The Industry Standard. All rights reserved.
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