Times Colonist

RCMP admits using spy tech to track cellphone data

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OTTAWA — The RCMP confirmed Wednesday what civil liberties groups say has been an open secret for them for some time: that the Mounties use so-called mobile device identifier­s, also known as Stingrays, to identify and locate cellphones.

In a rare disclosure of police tactics, the national police force acknowledg­ed in a statement that it used the technology 19 times last year, but insisted that it did so in compliance with the law and with judicial authorizat­ion.

The Mounties say the devices can identify and locate cellular devices, such as a mobile phone, enabling police to identify and apprehend a criminal suspect or locate a missing person.

The RCMP does not intercept phone calls, email or text messages, contact lists, images, encryption keys or basic subscriber informatio­n, the statement said.

The disclosure, a rarity for the RCMP, followed a CBC report that someone in downtown Ottawa has been using a device known as an “IMSI catcher,” which can intercept and identify cellphone metadata.

The CBC report found the device being used in recent months in close proximity to Parliament Hill and the U.S. and Israeli embassies, among other locations.

Brenda McPhail of the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n said the technology casts far too broad a net, since it captures the data of innocent people who might be in range of the device.

The federal privacy commission­er’s office acknowledg­ed Wednesday that it is investigat­ing the use of the IMSI devices following a complaint by OpenMedia, a self-described crowd-sourced civic engagement platform online.

The technology works by momentaril­y connecting to cellphones in its immediate proximity, before returning them to their own networks. It collects metadata associated with the phones, allowing the operator to identify the phone used by the suspect.

“There are a limited number of authorized and trained RCMP operators who can use MDI technology and its use is subject to very strict rules, senior management approval and judicial authorizat­ion prior to deployment,” the RCMP statement said.

Except for cases where there is an immediate threat of death or serious harm, police must obtain warrants to use the devices, it added.

McPhail, the associatio­n’s director of privacy, technology and surveillan­ce, said the RCMP has long refused to confirm or deny that it used Stingrays.

“These devices are not about targeted surveillan­ce,” McPhail said. “In order to find the informatio­n of one suspect or a small group … you’re capturing the informatio­n of thousands of innocent bystanders at the same time.”

Added Laura Tribe, executive director of OpenMedia: “Now that the RCMP has come clean, can we finally have the public debate about privacy and accountabi­lity that Canadians deserve?”

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