Judge Rules to Allow Warrantless Secret Hidden Surveillance Cameras on Private Property

Judge Rules to Allow Warrantless Hidden Surveillance Cameras on Private Property

Judge Rules to Allow Warrantless Hidden Surveillance Cameras on Private Property

It’s unbelievable that U.S. District Judge William Griesbach has ruled that it is OK for Drug Enforcement Administration agents to enter a person’s private property, without a warrant, and without the owner’s permission, in order to install and monitor hidden surveillance cameras.

So now we all must sit back and wonder if we even have a Fourth Amendment anymore, since the ruling by U.S. District Judge William Griesbach has all but made unreasonable searches by law enforcement officers perfectly legal.

When you go home tonight, is someone watching you? Did the DEA break into your house while you were at work and install hidden surveillance equipment, without your knowledge and without first obtaining a warrant? After Judge William Griesbach’s ruling, it is completely possible that someone is inside your home at this very second, installing equipment to allow the DEA to spy on you.

Police are allowed in some circumstances to install hidden surveillance cameras on private property without obtaining a search warrant, a federal judge said yesterday.

CNET



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Obama’s DEA Also Involved In Colombia Prostitution Scandal

Not only was Obama’s Secret Service having fun on the job and paying prostitutes for sex, but now we learn that members of Obama’s Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) were involved in the prostitution scandal as well.

The real question is, “Who in the Obama administration didn’t have sex with hookers?”

Remove Obama and all of the corruption surrounding the Obama administration!

A month after the Secret Service was rocked by allegations that agents brought prostitutes to a Colombia hotel where they were preparing for a visit by President Obama, the Drug Enforcement Administration today announced that at least three of its agents are also under investigation for allegedly hiring prostitutes in Cartagena.

Two of the agents allegedly had encounters with masseuses in the apartment of one of the agents, according to Sen. Susan Collins, the ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

“It’s disturbing that we may be uncovering a troubling culture that spans more than one law enforcement agency,” the Maine Republican said this evening. “In addition to the Secret Service scandal, we now learn



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