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SAN FRANCISCO - The California Supreme Court ruled Monday that police do not need a warrant to search a cell phone carried by someone under arrest.The justices determined a Ventura County deputy had the right to conduct a warrantless search of the text messages of a man he had arrested on suspicion of participating i
stanley cupe n a drug deal.The state court ruled 5-2 that U.S. Supreme Court precedent affirms that police can search items found on defendants when they are arrested.However, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that in 2007, U.S
stanley bottles . District Court Judge Susan Illston ruled that police could not search the cell phones of drug defendants without a warrant.The Ohio Supreme Court also found in 2009 that police did not have that right. California Deputy Attorney General Victoria Wilson, who represented the prosecution in the case decided Monday, told the newspaper the split opinions in California and Ohio could lead the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in on the cell phone issue.The California Supreme Court
stanley mug decided the loss of privacy upon arrest extends beyond the arrestee s body to include personal property.Authorities can not only seize items but also can open and examine what they find, the ruling said.The case stems from the arrest of defendant Gregory Diaz in 2007. A detective took the phone from Diaz s pocket when he was arrested. Ninety minutes later, a deputy searched its text messages without obtaining a warrant and found evidence linking Diaz to the drug deal Dbey CBS Evening News and Clarissa Ward win duPont award
While visiting an estate in Ontario Niagara Falls two years ago, a film enthusiast stumbled upon a rare World War I Richard Verascope stereo camera previously owned by the French Army. Here what he found inside. The verascope camera, which was purchased by A Nerd World 8216 Chris Hughes, was found in pristine condition and included the original leather carrying case and glass slides. The antique had been in the possession of an elderly man who was clearing out his camera collection in preparation for retirement. Each slide is a piece of history in photographic form and I get shivers every time I place a glass slide into the 3D stereo viewer, writes Hughes. Here what a typical glass slide looks like: And A Nerd World 3D digital rendering: This one a bit harrowing. Two soldiers help a commrade who has
stanley cup been shot, while a dead body lies in the backgr
stanley cup ound: This one is Hughes favorite: Four friends looking straight into the lens: About two dozen soldiers try to push a cannon to the top of a hill: The scale of the destruction is clearly demonstrated in this photo: Solider gather for a funeral: Plenty more at A Nerd 8216 World. Check out these unpublished color photos of World War II American bomber cre
stanley cup ws Collector buys a camera at an antique shop 鈥?and it filled with undeveloped pics from World War I