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by sheldonwt
5888 days ago
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Can you remind me again how you qualify a phone (lost, drunkenly) as 'stolen'. You seem to be using that word rather loosely, when the person who found that phone in fact found lost property, not stolen property. Nobody stole from Apple here, rather Apple made a grave mistake which it seems in hindsight they then used the police to assist in helping them recover from.
How can you say that Apple's clear and apparent ability to influence the actions of the police isn't at least a little bit frightening? A little bit?
It doesn't matter whether Gruber or Gawker posted those pictures, the fact of the matter is that the journalist who did post them faced what seems to be police persecution at Apple's direction.
Consider, just for a moment, that it had been a Windows Mobile 7 phone. Do you think the police would be breaking into his home? |
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"One who finds lost property under circumstances which give him knowledge of or means of inquiry as to the true owner, and who appropriates such property to his own use, or to the use of another person not entitled thereto, without first making reasonable and just efforts to find the owner and to restore the property to him, is guilty of theft."
CAL. PEN. CODE § 485