this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2024
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cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/24704051

The San Francisco Chronicle reports that police in Oakland, California, and other places, have been obtaining warrants that allow them to tow Teslas that may have been parked within close proximity to local crimes. In many cases, police will get the driver’s permission before they access the data inside the vehicles. However, on rare occasions, when police feel the information needs to be gotten quickly, they will simply use a court-ordered warrant to tow the vehicle and empty it of its necessary evidence.

The Chronicle reports that the warrant-and-tow method has been used by Oakland police in at least three instances over the past two months. The cars’ external cameras, paired with its sophisticated network of sensors, can prove particularly helpful in solving cases. In one recent case in the city, a woman was shot and killed after a group of men pulled guns on one another and began shooting. Police took advantage of video recorded by a nearby Tesla to aid their investigation. Ultimately, two men were arrested several weeks later and charged with murder, the newspaper reports.

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 months ago

Isn't it tho?

Theft is more than intention. It's taking what isn't yours without permission. If I go to your house and steal your tv with the intention of giving it back to you at a later time, I think you'd say I stole your tv.

The police might have a warrant and legally be able to take your car which has the footage on it, one could argue it's legalized theft.

I think the point here is that, while the police might legally be able to do it, it might be pushing the boundary just a little and maybe the police shouldn't legally be able to take your car just because it was in the area of a crime.