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I may be ignorantly sympathizing too much with Bourne, McBain, Murtaugh, and Riggs, (or ignorantly missing a crucially-relevant aspect of privacy), but…

As long as we (the law-abiding) are beset on all sides by snake oil vendors and swindlers who indiscriminately steal identities from infants and retirement from octogenarians, why should a sting operation not be converted to the Matrix from Meatspace?

Retort preempt attempts—I understand that:
1) some government officials have been caught abusing their power/privilege/access
2) suspected !== proven guilty
3) a warrant would likely more easily justify this sort of thing (and cooperation with Facebook might make them willing participants)
4) framing a woman as an informant and putting her in physical danger is not the goal, nor is it acceptable “collateral damage.”

If my child were the victim of a homicide I’d want every imaginable resource utilized to apprehend the culprit (the *correct* culprit to be sure). Is the biggest issue here that Brockler went rogue as “Taisha” without pre-navigating the proper legal channels?

The here issue is that Brockler is not law enforcement but a lawyer for prosecution. He didn’t do this to get evidence but to sabotage the defense’s witnesses. I don’t know about the laws involved but at the very least it is incredibly unethical (IMO he ought to be in jail for this).

With the DEA agent mentioned in the article, he wasn’t ‘undercover’ he essentially stole someone’s identity. Although I’m the kind of guy who thinks that any of these fake accounts are wrong I think most people would agree that government agents impersonating real people crosses a line.

Perfect, thanks. And you’re right–that is unethical at minimum.

I suppose that’s what I get for skimming the article; if I’d spent that time re-spelunking the article instead of composing a convoluted question, I’d likely have found that myself.
:-/

thanks again

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