Google Glass User Interrogated by DHS on Suspicion of Movie Pirating

Before getting too bothered by the following, remember 1) there
is no where for the federal government to cut spending and 2) the
Department of Homeland Security is saving our lives from terrorism
and their expense and methods shouldn’t be questioned too hard.

Still, I found this
long account from the Gadgeteer web site
about how a Google
Glass user watching Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit at an AMC
theater in Columbus, Ohio, on Saturday was taken out of the movie
and subjected to a multi-hour, multi-agent interrogation by agents
of the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs
division, and it makes you wonder.

Part of the glass-wearers reminiscence:

What followed was over an hour of the “feds” telling me I am not
under arrest, and that this is a “voluntary interview”, but if I
choose not to cooperate bad things may happen to me (is it legal
for authorities to threaten people like that?). I kept telling them
that Glass has a USB port and not only did I allow them, I actually
insist they connect to it and see that there was nothing but
personal photos with my wife and my dog on it….They wanted to
know who I am, where I live, where I work, how much I’m making, how
many computers I have at home, why am I recording the movie, who am
I going to give the recording to, why don’t I just give up the guy
up the chain, ’cause they are not interested in me. Over and over
and over again.

I kept telling them that I wasn’t recording anything – my Glass
was off, they insisted they saw it on. I told them there would be a
light coming out the little screen if Glass was on, and I could
show them that, but they insisted that I cannot touch my Glass for
the fear “I will erase the evidence against me that was on
Glass”…..They wanted to know where I got Glass…. I offered
to show them receipt and Google Glass website if they would allow
me to access any computer with internet. Of course, that was not an
option. Then they wanted to know what does Google ask of me in
exchange for Glass, how much is Google paying me, who is my boss
and why am I recording the movie.

Eventually, after a long time somebody came with a laptop and an
USB cable at which point he told me it was my last chance to come
clean. I repeated for the hundredth time there is nothing to come
clean about and this is a big misunderstanding so the FBI guy
[actually DHS as it turns out] finally connected my Glass to the
computer, downloaded all my personal photos and started going
though them one by one (although they are dated and it was obvious
there was nothing on my Glass that was from the time
period they accused me of recording). Then they went through
my phone, and 5 minutes later they concluded I had done nothing
wrong.

I asked why didn’t they just take those five minutes at the
beginning of the interrogation and they just left the room. A guy
who claimed his name is Bob Hope (he gave me his business card)
came in the room, and said he was with the Movie Association and
they have problems with piracy at that specific theater and that
specific movie. He gave me two free movie passes “so I can see the
movie again”. I asked if they thought my Google Glass was such a
big piracy machine, why didn’t they ask me not to wear them in
the theater?….All he said was AMC called him, and he called the
FBI and “here are two more passes for my troubles”….

A statement from the DHS’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement
division, obtained by Columbus Dispatch:

On Jan. 18, special agents with ICE’s Homeland Security
Investigations
and local authorities briefly interviewed a man suspected of using
an
electronic recording device to record a film at an AMC theater
in
Columbus.  The man, who voluntarily answered questions,
confirmed to
authorities that the suspected recording device was also a pair
of
prescription eye glasses in which the recording function had
been
inactive. No further action was taken.

Khaalid Walls, ICE spokesman

New technologies can confuse people, I suppose. But it takes
paranoid government agents to turn being an early adopter into
being an obvious criminal of some sort.

Hat tip: Daniel Lozano

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