Thursday, July 05, 2012

Texas bucks national trend on state-level use of wiretaps: Feds do 98% of them

According to The Crime Report, nationally "Wiretap applications were far more likely to go through state courts than federal courts in 2011." In Texas, though, the opposite is true: State judges approved just two wiretaps in Texas in 2011, according to the most recent data reported in the United States Courts 2011 Wiretapping Report: Both were in Travis County involving drug cases. (See here, p. 298, large pdf.) One of the two wiretaps in Travis cost $104,934 and resulted in 14 arrests. Costs for the other, which lasted 30 days, were not reported and no arrests attributed to it.

In contrast, by Grits' count federal judges approved 104 wiretaps in Texas during calendar year 2011, of which 102 were narcotics cases and two related to "corruption." About four in 10 (41) federal wiretaps in Texas resulted in arrests, but several involved dozens of people. The largest, out of Texas' Northern District, resulted in 41 drug convictions. Motions to suppress wiretap evidence succeeded just six times and were denied 16 times.

In all, federal authorities arrested 411 people in Texas in 2011 based on wiretaps resulting in 164 convictions, including 29 arrests and 21 convictions in corruption cases. (Data compiled from these tables, pp. 90-99, large pdf.)

I'm not sure why Texas judges are bucking the national trend of approving more wiretaps than the feds, but by these data the feds in Texas are making up quite a bit of the difference, particularly in the Western District on narcotics cases.

RELATED: Via TDCAA, see "A primer on wiretaps, pen registers and trap and trace devices," which provides a bit of additional process detail regarding state-level wiretaps. "Each of Texas’ nine judicial regions has a designated district court judge authorized to sign interception orders. Statutorily, our ability to seek a wiretap is limited to the offenses of capital murder, murder, child pornography, and felony drug offenses other than possession of marijuana," wrote Fort Bend ADA Jeff Strange in 2009.

The TDCAA article also give some interesting background on pen registers and trap and trace devices, use of which is not documented in the US Courts wiretap report:
A pen register or trap and trace device, unlike a wiretap, does not require a finding of probable cause. The application must simply state under oath that the installation and use of the device will likely produce information material to an ongoing investigation. The application must further identify the telephone subscriber and the relevant phone number and carrier. The application may be reviewed by a district court judge in the jurisdiction of the requesting agency, the location of the device, telephone subscriber, or communications carrier.

Should a pen register or trap and trace appear to be useful in an ongoing investigation, it is a good idea to seek the assistance of a local Texas Ranger or DPS investigator. Any peace officer may apply for a pen register, but the application must be filed by the appropriate elected prosecutor unless the requesting peace officer is employed by the Texas Department of Public Safety or is “commissioned by the department.”
Not only does a pen register show outgoing and incoming phone numbers, but if tracking a cellular phone, it also identifies the cellular antenna and sector that the cell phone is using at the beginning and end of the call. Thus, a pen register has some utility tracking people, usually people with warrants for their arrest. A pen register is also a good source of investigative intelligence. If a known suspect and his phone are identified, a pen register can provide the identities of potential co-conspirators. After a completed crime, if a known suspect is on the run, a pen register helps identify potential destinations, allowing police to prepare a warm welcome for the wayward crook.
Like wiretaps, pen registers and trap and trace devices can be installed on an emergency basis, again, allowing officers to obtain verbal authorization and file the appropriate application within 48 hours.

9 comments:

  1. Texas officers seldom utilize wiretaps due to the costs and manpower needs required to run a wiretap.

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  2. Thank you very much for this simple information, it was very helpfull.

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  3. Grits for Breakfast, the ACLU, and the AFSCME, are barely uncovering the surface of TDCJ retaliation against Correctional Officers...the Wardens collect all of the yearly surveys done by Correctional Officers and put these in the shredders and then turn in the ones they filled out...nice huh? Wardens are Dictators of their own islands...and if you challenge them, someone will beat you up in the parking lot or ask for your TDCJ ID and then if you hand it over...YOU ARE THEN FIRED...these are Dangerous Times for TDCJ Corretional Officers and they must indure sometimes more hell than the Offenders...everyone in TDCJ is afraid to talk...it is your only job and Wardens, Majors, Captains, and Lt.s harass employees daily and they get away with it because no one is going to take the Correctional Officer's word...even I writing this don't have the courage to come forward because I would lose my job or get beaten up...it is a crappy position for sure and also, the Warden's controlling who makes rank is a family/friend affair that SUXs. The Sunset Committee needs to delete all wardens...and shut down family/friends only being promoted units...it is another reason COs QUIT THEIR JOBS...

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  4. I'm no defender of TDCJ, but acquaintances tell me that CO is a pretty cushy job--just show up for your shift and be present. I have no personal first hand knowledge.

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  5. So TX is doing MORE wiretaps? I guess I can see if they're trying to get Mexican, et al., drug smugglers.
    But it also leans towards police state--if for citizens.
    I've been concerned a long time TX State gov doesn't even do the conservative things like OK, ID and some other States. And TX allows the IRS to trample us, when they should be interposing and nullifying. (There are no federal property tax laws--the IRS should never be able to lien or levy without going through court. No, lawyers, you're wrong, you're allowing the feds to defeat both State & general national U.S. Constitution. Stop bending over and enabling appointed federal Exec. Branch Agencies to run amok. They should be barred (ha, Barred). Note there is no constitutional authority for federal police. Does the TX Constitution really allow State police?). I believe it's because they see TX as the new State of power (as CA fades, etc.) and they want to be on top of the oligarchy. I hope I'm wrong about their corruption.

    Geebus, somebody nullify Captcha!
    Let's try that, again. Hm.
    Let's try that, again.

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  6. Note there is no constitutional authority for federal police. Does the TX Constitution really allow State police?)

    We don't have a "state police", we have a department of public safety. How innocuous is that?

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  7. COs is a cushy job...what a crock of poop...being in 110 to 120 degrees all day and going up and down stairs...suiting up on move teams and riot control...your friends are full of it...being chunked on...having knife cuts on both hands and stabbed in the stomach...enjoy your world of lies that you wrote...you wrote it so it must be true...you are horribly wrong...if you are not in the picture then don't comment...

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  8. Three NSA whistleblowers have given evidence about the NSA massive spying program on American's
    and
    Secret USA Court can order all of your private e-mail information
    In this October 2011 newspaper article
    and
    US Govt Aggressive, Successful in Obtaining Twitter User Data
    Published on Tuesday, July 3, 2012
    (examples, other stories posted too, at)>
    https://plus.google.com/111485701979929741583/posts/93ZaxVfe9mn

    Too many other stories are posted at my Google+ profile.
    Information Dump at
    Welcome to my nightmare
    https://plus.google.com/u/0/111485701979929741583/posts/3b3msAXYU4s

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  9. Grits; me thinks some of these posts off topic ramblings. FISA court? Sure, but TDCJ and IRS? What the heck ...

    As for fancy terms like pin register, AT&T calls this "detailed billing" for its wireless customers.

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