This animation explains how phone tracker technology, commonly known as stingray, is used by the police. USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — Federal marshals have secretly used powerful cellphone surveillance tools to hunt nearly 6,000 suspects throughout the United States, according to newly-disclosed records in which the agency inadvertently identified itself as the nation’s most prolific known user of phone-tracking devices.
The fact that the
The Marshals Service’s response to that request
included an almost totally censored spreadsheet listing
its stingray cases, with information about the cases
stripped out line by line, which made it possible to
count the number of entries the agency had made on its
log of stingray uses. The agency described the log
in a letter as “a listing of
Stingrays are suitcase-sized devices that can pinpoint a cellphone’s location within a few yards by posing as a cell tower. In the process, they also intercept information about other cellphones that happen to be nearby, a fact that has raised concerns among privacy advocates and some lawmakers. Dozens of police departments use the devices, often concealing that fact from suspects and their lawyers.
The Marshals Service’s surveillance log lists 5,975 cases in which the Marshals Service used stingrays. The agency declined to say what time period the log covered, or where the suspects were arrested. It also declined to identify the suspects, to protect their privacy.
“Just that sheer number is significant,”
No other law enforcement agency is known to have used
stingrays so often. The
FBI director
Despite the nearly 6,000 times marshals used the device, there are few records to suggest that the government has revealed that fact to the suspects they arrested — though laws in some states require that suspects be notified of electronic surveillance.
Not disclosing use of stingrays appears to be the agency’s policy. The Marshals Service’s Technical Operations Group instructs agents that they should not reveal “sensitive or classified information or programs” without approval from the surveillance unit unless a court orders them to do so.
“For any sensitive technique, method, source or tool, it only makes good sense that law enforcement would not divulge this information,” said William Sorukas, a former supervisor of the Marshals Service's domestic investigations arm. “An investigator would never release or publicize the name of a confidential informant.”
Still, privacy advocates have expressed alarm about
the lengths to which law enforcement has gone to keep
the cellphone trackers secret, even from courts. In
2014, the ACLU obtained an email from a
A spokesman for the Marshals Service, Drew Wade, declined to answer questions about agents’ use of stingrays. Instead, he said in a statement that the marshals “use various investigative techniques” to locate fugitives, and that whatever those techniques might be, they are “subject to court approval."
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/02/23/us-marshals-service-cellphone-stingray/80785616/