Author Joel Margolis Details Challenges of Diverse Laws, Legal Interpretations and Standards -- and Delivers the Facts Carriers and Law Enforcement Need
WASHINGTON, DC--(Marketwired - Sep 23, 2013) - A frantic mother calls local police: Her 10-month old daughter has been abducted. Within 17 minutes police trace the perpetrator's mobile phone and location. In under an hour the kidnapper is caught and the infant returns home unharmed. The hero of this tale: mobile location data.
Mobile location is among the most important and widely used surveillance options pursued by law enforcement agencies (LEAs). The overwhelming majority of LEAs use some form of wireless surveillance via location data in investigations, per ACLU surveys. But with multiple surveillance and privacy laws in play, numerous inconsistent court interpretations, and the varying standards applied, mobile location data remains one of the most complex and challenging aspects of surveillance for all involved.
Wireless Surveillance: Carriers, Cops and Bad Guys, a new eGuide by Subsentio Senior Director of Government Affairs, Joel Margolis, helps communications service providers, general counsels, LEAs and policymakers map their way through the legal thicket of mobile location data. Highlights include:
Wireless Surveillance: Carriers, Cops and Bad Guys is available free of charge at www.subsentio.com
About Subsentio
Subsentio, Inc. www.subsentio.com is trusted by communications service providers and law enforcement agencies to perform court ordered lawful electronic surveillance. Based in Centennial, CO, the company has national, regional and rural service provider clients.
Contact Information:
Media Contact:
Jim Crawford
Crawford PR, for Subsentio
703-498-7315