Your body is being tracked, and you could be unwittingly building a case against yourself!

August 28, 2018

By: Bobby Casey, Managing Director GWP

body incrimination watch monitorLooks like Big Brother isn’t just invading your home and car… he’s now invading your body. More specifically, your heart.

During a fire at his home, Ross Compton was glad he had a pacemaker. Unfortunately, the same device responsible for keeping him alive “tattled” on him.

Of course, other suspicious circumstances helped get him arrested for arson, but it was the data inside his pacemaker that was the tipping point.

The key part of the Journal News story sums up his arson indictment nicely:

The data taken from Compton’s pacemaker included his heart rate, pacer demand and cardiac rhythms prior to, during and after the fire.

 A cardiologist who reviewed that data determined “it is highly improbable Mr. Compton would have been able to collect, pack and remove the number of items from the house, exit his bedroom window and carry numerous large and heavy items to the front of his residence during the short period of time he has indicated due to his medical conditions,” the court documents state.

Obviously, I’m not defending arsonists. And it may seem like this is a case where it was justified for the police to get a warrant to seize the data in the perp’s pacemaker. But is it really that black and white?

What about the 5th Amendment (the right not to self-incriminate)? How much “security” do we need in exchange for our privacy?

 Enter Fitbit, and the new age of the “digital witness.” In a weird murder case without human witnesses, just about every digital tool was accessed

  • Facebook posts.
  • A digital key fob.
  • A “smart” home security system.
  • And walking data from a Fitbit.

Fittingly, the case was dubbed the Fitbit murder, and walking data from his wife’s Fitbit device showed the husband wasn’t telling the truth.

His wife walked 10 times further than he claimed, and she was shown to be alive almost an hour longer than he claimed (using Fitbit time stamps).

The husband’s case awaits trial. Remember, no witnesses or other suspects. Will this be the first case where someone gets convicted of murder mostly from data?

Do we want the kind of society where our own devices can be used to incriminate us, or possibly suggest a different version of a story than what actually happened?

An Apple Watch has even been used to suggest a supposed “victim” of a home invasion may have staged the break-in.

The watch measures heartbeat, and assuming it was measuring the heartbeat of the “victim”… her story is off by almost 3 hours.

But these are all criminal investigations. What about you?

If you think you have nothing to hide, think again. Any one of your digital devices can provide a “connection” to a place, person, or weapon that law enforcement needs to make your life a living hell.

Laptops, Fitbits, Amazon Alexa, your smartphone, tablets, Apple Watches, even FM radio transmitters.

All trackable to your location, voice print, words, heart rate, number of steps, blood pressure (so “they” know you take medication, and can discover what kind).

And if they assemble enough data, any Government agency, law enforcement official, or criminal hacker can form any “case” they want to, even if you’ve done nothing wrong.

In fact, the average American may be committing three felonies every day because of vague legal definition, and the disappearance of intent:

Boston civil-liberties lawyer Harvey Silverglate calls his new book “Three Felonies a Day,” referring to the number of crimes he estimates the average American now unwittingly commits because of vague laws. New technology adds its own complexity, making innocent activity potentially criminal.

The “new technology” Mr. Silverglate is referring to are the devices I’ve listed above.

As a “cherry on top” of this privacy fiasco, the NSA has intercepted Cisco routers during delivery to the consumer, so they could “bug” them.

In the document, an internal newsletter from June 2010, the chief of the NSA’s Access and Target Development department explains the process of intercepting routers, servers and other internet hardware to install beacon implants, then resealing them and sending them on to targets.

Think you could never be a “target”?

Think again, because even if you’re not the “direct” target of an NSA investigation, you might have been in the wrong place at the wrong time. If the NSA suspects you could aid their investigation, you could be watched without your knowledge.

Bottom line… as the stories above illustrate, your private life is an open book that any Government agency or individual with cheap technology can exploit.

With just a few clicks, a phone call, and a few dollars almost everything someone wants to find out about you can quickly be put together into a complete file.

And who knows how some stranger (including law enforcement) will use that information? So you need to start protecting your privacy any way that you can, right now…

That’s why you should get our new “Go Off the Grid” report, which is your blueprint for living a truly private life. Here are a few of the things inside…

  • DO THIS NOW: The one thing almost no one does to properly hide their home address, and it has nothing to do with getting a PO Box. (page 4).
  •  The “privacy veil” you can set up with a few clicks that renders you practically anonymous — and helps you slash your taxes. (page 24)
  • Secure your phone number and your calls from snoops and credit agencies in minutes with this “Smart” blueprint. (page 13)
  • The secret “shield” that makes your home, car, and other assets practically lien proof. You’ll be able to “set it once and forget it.” (page 16)
  • The digital “Ghost” that can protect you online, make your digital footprints disappear, and even save you money on airplane tickets. (page 19)
  •  And more… including how to legally remove yourself from the banking system.

If you are serious about protecting your private life, then you don’t want to miss this brand new report…

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To living privately,

Bobby Casey

Location Independent Entrepreneur

P.S. Crimes used to require “criminal intent.” But because most prosecutors don’t want to (or can’t) understand technology, your digital devices can link you to crime without intent or your knowledge.

The truth is, even the most innocent people with good intentions can be linked to anything else in our hyper-connected society.

And it doesn’t matter if your digital device “tattles” on you to make that connection.

Get my special report today and learn how to go completely “off the grid,” without having to move out to a cabin in Montana. You won’t even have to leave your couch.

 Download our new “Off the Grid” Report now.