I'm old enough to know this referenceMy safe is cheap, so it would only slow down a thief, but might stall a 5 year old girl…. No I don’t open carry..,,
Really this is no different than many other products. Look at the Ford vehicles and a vin number the dealer can produce a replication of keys.Thieves are thieves whether they wear badges or not.
A safe is meant to protect your belongings against thieves. If the product gives thieves access to your property with a simple phone call, then what the **** is the point of their product?
We do to know if is brand specific, model specific, or unit specific…Apparently there is a "master code" to Liberty Safes. Or at least a particular model of Liberty Safes.
The FBI now has that master code.
That means that they can open any safe (or that model of safe), owned by anyone, with a minimal of effort.
Apparently there is a "master code" to Liberty Safes. Or at least a particular model of Liberty Safes.
The FBI now has that master code.
That means that they can open any safe (or that model of safe), owned by anyone, with a minimal of effort.
Not exactly. Technologically, maybe but philosophically/morally not a dime's worth of difference.
I think if the FBI wants to see inside your safe. You have more **** on your shoe than one stick can wipe off.
So scratch off melt off your safes S/N and all is lost especially if you forget.Agree to disagree. It's the difference between "you have to join in the manhunt to help me look for this fugitive" vs "you have to let me look for the fugitive on my own".
Some businesses cooperate with LE voluntarily, as shocking as it may be. They give us video, for example, while others require a warrant. It's up to them. Neither is a constitutional issue and that "private info" is the company's info, contains no PII of yours, etc. Without already having the safe's s/n, there's no way to get the code.
You’re getting railroaded for J6, you’re not going to own anything you need a safe for again.That's funny read this thread an hour ago then the first article that shows on my news feed is surprise, suprise a news piece about the same thing! Big brother Google is watching! But for real they have warrant, last thing I'd want to do is have to buy a new safe too, I know that's not the point but I guess neither is the guys IQ.
They would have just cut it open. We just had an incident where our former Sheriff was served a search warrant which included his safe(s). Didn't voluntarily open them and the Fire Department was requested to the scene and opened them.
From my experience if a company is served with a proper subpoena they will provide with what is asked for. For the most part it doesn't matter what company you buy from.
If for some reason they don't provide the info they will find other means to get it.
It doesn't sound like Liberty Safe was served with a subpoena. It sounds like the police just said they had a search warrant for someone's safe. I doubt that Liberty was legally required to give them the information.