Do you know for a fact MA was not a chop shop? Please provide a link if so. Apparently one stolen motorcycle is theft = a crime in the eyes of the law. And it was found in MA's hangar which puts him in possession of it.
Maybe we should included some important facts about the case you are referring to to have a better understanding of that case. You are comparing apples to oranges IMO.
Come on now, in such large cities where there are many of these types of seizures and searches going down on a daily basis, where LE, judges and forensics probably run them through like they are on an assembly line, you don't have faith in LE to know the proper procedures when taking electronic devices into their possession, what rules apply before searches can be done to them?? With these laws seemingly always changing, I bet the big city LE are right on top of these laws. I for one am not worried and I don't think you should be either.
Oh and another thing, the whole chop shop thing...that's peanuts compared to the three murder charges DM is facing. We're speaking of probably 75 years of being in "the hole". :yow: MS, 40 years to life. MOO.
Police entering a home with a search warrant have no right to examine any computers they find unless a judge has given them specific permission, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled unanimously./B]
In a British Columbia case involving a man police suspected of diverting electricity from B.C. Hydro for a marijuana-growing operation, a judge had granted a search warrant that made no mention of access to computers. The police seized two computers anyway in an attempt to prove that the man, Vu Thanh Long, lived in the house. The trial judge threw out that evidence, saying that in the digital age, it was inconceivable a warrant could implicitly authorize a computer search.
If they do not have a warrant specifying a computer search, police are entitled to seize and hold computers while they seek a judge’s authorization to look at their contents, the court said.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...omputers-supreme-court-rules/article15309690/