Prison Guy Singlehandedly Exposes Stingray - A Conspiracy Theory That Is Real

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This is a great little read...guy was in prison for filing tax returns for dead people, and he became obsessed with how he was caught.
He ended up reading over 15000 docs, and broke this story.


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Over the last year the world has learned a lot about a jarring surveillance technology. It's called "Stingray," and it's a device used by both federal and state law enforcement agencies to gain access to citizens' cell phone data.

Even though we’re now getting a better sense of what Stingray does, we still know little about how this technology became known to the public.

A new radio interview, however, has tracked down the man who first discovered the clandestine technology.

Stingray works by mimicking cellphone towers. The authorities drive around with them sending out signals and all mobile devices in the vicinity are forced to connect to it. It has reportedly been used by numerous enforcement agencies for years, thousands of times. But the problem is that any organization signing on to use the device is forced to sign a nondisclosure agreement.

This means that if a group is asked to divulge details of Stingray in court, they must drop the case.

Given all this, it's quickly become clear that the authorities never wanted people to know that Stingray existed. In fact, according to the latest episode of the WNYC radio show Note To Self, it took an obsessed man in prison to comb through thousands of documents to piece together what was going on.

A reclusive fraudster
Daniel Rigmaiden is the man who first discovered Stingray while he was in prison facing charges of tax fraud. In an attempt to live off the grid, Rigmaiden had concocted a scheme where he would file tax returns for dead people. He did so for quite a while — making sure to cover his tracks — and was able to rake in thousands of dollars.

Despite his intense meticulousness to details, Rigmaiden was ultimately caught by the authorities. Yet he didn’t understand how they became hip to his ways. He used a slew of fake IDs, maintained almost no public identity, and even lived in the woods. The only weak link, he thought, was the cellular AirCard he used to access the internet. But, given that he only used fake identities and anonymized his web browsing, Rigmaiden did not understand how they tracked him down.

And so he began to research.

They sent "rays into my living room"
Rigmaiden had a hunch of how he was caught. He told his lawyer "I think they tracked me down by sending rays into my living room." At the time — over five years ago — this seemed unheard of. No one had ever claimed that the police could surveil citizens in such a capacity.

stingrayUS Patent and Trademark OfficeThe Stingray surveillance tool allows police to track a cell phone's location down to the very room it's in.

Unable to convince a lawyer to defend him with such a claim, Rigmaiden decided to represent himself. The man requested thousands of documents pertaining to his case, and slowly combed through any mentions of new technologies. According to the Note To Self episode, he read over 15,000 pages of court documents.
Finally, Rigmaiden discovered a few allusions to new "investigative techniques" associated with cell towers.

And this is where things get even more miraculous. Rigmaiden didn’t have internet access in prison, so for months he called a court appointed paralegal to do his online searching. He gave this person detailed instructions about what to Google, who would then send him the appropriate documents. Rigmaiden spent hours on the phone with this paralegal trying to describe whatever it was he was looking for.

Putting the pieces together
Conducting his own investigation for years, Rigmaiden slowly amassed enough proof via formal documents and transcript from local meetings to get a sense for what Stingray really was: A secret new technology that intercepted cell phones so authorities could gather data from them. With this new information he assembled, he made a dossier of his findings.

Finally, the prisoner contacted the American Civil Liberties Union’s Christopher Soghoian, who ultimately helped illuminate the public about what Stingray is and how it was being used by authorities.

Since then, numerous probes have been made about the constitutionality of Stingray, and slowly documents are surfacing detailing just how widespread it is. We now know Stingray has been used thousands of times in numerous states, and is even beginning to be trialed in the UK.

Of course, the irony is that if a suspect discovers the authorities used Stingray against them, they will likely be set free because those using Stingray aren't allowed to disclose any information about the technology.

And all of this information is thanks to one man who was obsessive enough to spend years combing through documents to fully understand what led to his arrest.

WNYC radio show Note To Self reports that Rigmaiden is no longer incarcerated and in fact is often used as a consultant for lawyers and legislators looking into the Stingray technology.
 

Never bet against America.
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Nice find Falls. It wasn't that long ago a story broke out how the feds have airplanes flying over cities collecting cell phone information with this technology. They say they are only after bad guys but at the same time they are picking up everyone's cell phone data and communications. Nothing sacred.
 

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The information age is insane........placing computer chips into peoples bodies isn't too far, I say within 20 years they will be chipping people.

You won't be able to fart in the comfort of your home in the future w/o the govt knowing about it.
 

Never bet against America.
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The information age is insane........placing computer chips into peoples bodies isn't too far, I say within 20 years they will be chipping people.

You won't be able to fart in the comfort of your home in the future w/o the govt knowing about it.


And it will be done and accepted in the name of safety. Children will be chipped for tracking purposes. Lose your child at the fun park, No Problem, just pull up the GPS on your cell phone and there your child is.
 

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And it will be done and accepted in the name of safety. Children will be chipped for tracking purposes. Lose your child at the fun park, No Problem, just pull up the GPS on your cell phone and there your child is.



Yep, I think it will be tested on inmates in prisons first, then Alzheimer's patients, the kids in schools & then the rest of the population for their safety.

No more kidnappings where you can't find the child.......a prisoner escapes prison, they will find him within minutes. Same goes for an Alzheimer's patient.......dont get me wrong, it will make for a safer society & technology is great, but there's also an evil side to it, & we as a society will pay the price for it.
 

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Yep, I think it will be tested on inmates in prisons first, then Alzheimer's patients, the kids in schools & then the rest of the population for their safety.

No more kidnappings where you can't find the child.......a prisoner escapes prison, they will find him within minutes. Same goes for an Alzheimer's patient.......dont get me wrong, it will make for a safer society & technology is great, but there's also an evil side to it, & we as a society will pay the price for it.

The technology is already here, and being used on pets. All my pets are chipped. Personally I have no problem with tech, I love new tech. If people want to spend their money and chip themselves, more power to them. Government mandates are the problem, not the tech.
 

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The technology is already here, and being used on pets. All my pets are chipped. Personally I have no problem with tech, I love new tech. If people want to spend their money and chip themselves, more power to them. Government mandates are the problem, not the tech.



Technology will always be used against the human element, & eventually, it will destroy us.
 

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Technology will always be used against the human element, & eventually, it will destroy us.

I disagree. Technology has for the most part made our lives longer, healthier, easier, comfortable and more enjoyable. This new generation will live past their 100's. Technology, is the reason we are able to support huge populations. Technology is the reason we haven't gone extinct, and be what saves us again and again.
 

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Technology has its good side & its bad side......thing is, people tend to use technology to benefit their agenda, whether its good or bad is left up to the user.

Like a gun or knife, it can be used for good, but its often used to cause chaos in the world, have you send what happen in South Carolina by a person using a gun? It changed peoples lives forever......

Same thing goes for technology, it can help us immensely, but it can be used to destroy us as well.

There are privacy advocates that fight forall of us every day, but with technology getting better, those rights are being thrown out the window, as you can see by the opening article in this thread.
 

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The information age is insane........placing computer chips into peoples bodies isn't too far, I say within 20 years they will be chipping people.

You won't be able to fart in the comfort of your home in the future w/o the govt knowing about it.

scary as heck
 

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Our rights are being violated at an alarming rate. People need to wake the f*ck up and start question our government.
 
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Question authority is a healthy way to maintain the dogs at bay. Wish more people would do it but unfortunately our culture and education system is programmed to raise pawns and not kings. So many people I know that are abused by governement or their boss and they don't question shit.
 

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I disagree. Technology has for the most part made our lives longer, healthier, easier, comfortable and more enjoyable. This new generation will live past their 100's. Technology, is the reason we are able to support huge populations. Technology is the reason we haven't gone extinct, and be what saves us again and again.

Yea people living to 100-120 years is not necessarily a good thing. More people=less resources=more suffering in the long run. The human population as it is is reaching unsustainable levels. Nature will always rear it's ugly head with a pandemic or some other cataclysm to keep our numbers in check. Unless we as humans destroy ourselves first. I will vote for the latter.
 

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I disagree. Technology has for the most part made our lives longer, healthier, easier, comfortable and more enjoyable. This new generation will live past their 100's. Technology, is the reason we are able to support huge populations. Technology is the reason we haven't gone extinct, and be what saves us again and again.

imagine the duration of a lifetime if the food industry and GMO's weren't destroying the human body.
 

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great post Falls.

Thanks for
2011-cher-400.jpg
ing.
 

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