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HP had to know that obtaining personal phone records without a warrant was
strictly illegal. The moment an investigator offered up phone records, HP should have refused to look at them and called the police. Instead, they accepted those records and used them illegally. We should see a number of resignations from the board very soon. This really stinks.
Posted by: DonnieBoy   Posted on: 09/07/06 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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HP had to know that obtaining personal phone records without a warrant was  DonnieBoy | 09/07/06
What do you base that assumtion on?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/07/06
what?? you can't be serious...  thatxbxtchxnicoll | 09/07/06
This does stink.  Leria | 09/07/06
Only wrong when it happens to execs?  jstead1 | 09/07/06
It would seem that way wouldn't it?  Shelendrea | 09/07/06
HP broke no laws  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/07/06
Maybe they did  John L. Ries | 09/07/06
Ummm if they hire someone  Linux User 147560 | 09/07/06
"culpable by association"  handydan918 | 09/08/06
You can't avoid culpability for a crime by hiring someone else to do it!  jimbo_z | 09/07/06
Did you not RTFA?  buran | 09/08/06
no federal law against it  baubo | 09/07/06
HP vs Keyworth  margsi2 | 09/07/06
Just call it FRAUD  PCcritic | 09/08/06
Its Wrong and just a litte Its Way Wrong...BUT so many secrets  ISI101 | 09/08/06
Pretexting  www.hansencc.net | 09/10/06

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