Colorado grandma sues as detective used Apple's 'Find My' app to wrongly identify her house for SWAT raid
The unwarranted SWAT raid in her home caused Johnson 'severe physical and emotional distress', according to her complaint
meaww
December 6, 2022
DENVER, COLORADO: An elderly Colorado woman is suing a
Denver police detective
who allegedly ordered a SWAT raid on her home after it was incorrectly
identified by Apple's "Find my" app as the location of various stolen
items, including six weapons and an old iPhone, according to a lawsuit
filed on November 30.
The complaint
claims that Denver Police Department Detective Gary Staab improperly
issued a warrant for the raid of 77-year-old Ruby Johnson's home on
January 4 based on what the complaint calls a "hastily prepared,
bare-bones, misleading affidavit." The lawsuit was filed in Denver
District Court by attorneys with the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
of Colorado. Johnson is suing Staab "in his individual capacity,"
according to the lawsuit. Johnson is asking for a jury trial and
unspecified damages.
A screenshot from the app revealed the phone "pinged" somewhere
in the vicinity of Johnson's home and did not give a precise location.
According to the complaint, Johnson's right to "be free of unreasonable
searches and seizures" as guaranteed by the state constitution was
infringed by Staab's affidavit. Since
the affidavit
was allegedly based on an ambiguous and unverified ping by Apple's
"Find My" feature, which is used to track Apple devices, there was
allegedly lack of "probable cause that evidence of crime could be found"
at Johnson's residence,
NBC reports.
The search warrant was issued the day after a white truck with a Texas
licence plate was allegedly stolen from the parking garage of a Denver
Hyatt hotel as per the truck's owner, who was staying at the hotel. Six
firearms, including a tactical military-style rifle, two drones, $4,000
in cash, and an outdated iPhone 11 were among the items the truck's
owner reported as stolen to the police.
According to the complaint, Johnson's
right to "be free of unreasonable searches and seizures" as guaranteed
by the state constitution was infringed by Staab's affidavit. The complaint claims that Staab did not do any additional police work to
verify his claims that the stolen iPhone was inside Johnson’s home.
According to the lawsuit, Staab spoke with the truck's owner over the
phone the following morning. The owner had claimed to have used the
"Find My" app to look for his missing things and that it had twice
pinged Johnson's address. A copy of the document shows that Staab then
cited that assertion as justification for the raid.
According to the complaint, Staab reportedly neglected to make an effort
to independently verify the alleged location of the stolen goods before
conducting the raid. Also, the "Find My" app is used to determine
approximations of locations and "is not intended as a law enforcement
tool." According to a picture on the complaint that was also shown on
the affidavit received by KUSA, the region that was marked on the app as
the potential location of the phone, for instance, encompassed at least
six properties and four blocks.
Officers ordered the Colorado grandmother, wearing a bathrobe, out of her home to complete the raid. Staab reportedly neglected to make an
effort to do additional work to verify the alleged location of the
stolen goods before conducting the raid The complaint asserts that Staab's affidavit violated Johnson's
right to be "free of unreasonable searches and seizures." The lawsuit was filed Wednesday by Colorado's ACLU.
“Defendant Staab presented his false characterization of the
screenshot’s meaning as an objective fact and omitted the particular
facts and circumstances that contradicted it," the complaint states.
The police department is said to be collaborating with the district
attorney's office "to develop additional training for officers and
assistant district attorneys related to seeking warrants based upon find
my phone applications." According to the statement, the department's
Police Chief, Ron Thomas, has ordered an internal investigation in
response to the incident.
Johnson was "frightened and confused" when the SWAT team arrived in
military gear, with tactical rifles and a police-trained German Shepherd
dog, and used a bullhorn to demand that anyone inside the home come
out, according to the filing, which describes Johnson as a "United
States Postal Service worker and grandmother who lives alone in Denver's
Montbello neighbourhood."
The episode caused Johnson “severe physical and emotional distress,"
according to the complaint: "Ms. Johnson’s privacy, sense of safety, and
peace in her home have been shattered since her house became the scene
of a militarized criminal investigation."
2 comments:
I thought there was somebody who was supposed to verify that this sort of shit was right before they hit a house.
Uh-Oh and Awe Shit come to mind on this affidavit review.
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