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Lackawanna official suspended after tweet supporting Trump assassination

Apple announces it will take action against order to unlock shooter’s phone

In a recent statement, the FBI claimed that the perpetrator who attempted to assassinate former President Donald Trump acted alone. However, that claim has faltered as the FBI also admits that it did not have access to the suspect’s encrypted cell phone data.

The fact that the phone cannot be unlocked raises serious questions about the thoroughness of the investigation and the credibility of the lone perpetrator’s account.

Critics argue that without access to the phone’s data, crucial evidence that could potentially uncover larger conspiracies or confirm the lone gunman theory would remain out of reach.

The FBI is investigating the shooting at the July 13 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, that tragically left one person dead and several injured, including former President Trump. This is an isolated assassination attempt that may be linked to domestic terrorism. Although initial findings indicate the shooter acted alone, the investigation continues to examine possible co-conspirators. Authorities are examining the shooter’s phone, residence, and vehicle, where they found and neutralized suspicious devices. The weapon used was legally acquired and the shooter had no prior FBI criminal record, so efforts are intensifying to uncover motives and related activities.

The ongoing battle between law enforcement and digital privacy rights, particularly with regard to encryption, complicates these high-stakes investigations.

The FBI’s history with encrypted devices shows a pattern of challenges that could hamper its ability to fully understand the motives and context in such critical cases.

Since the FBI did not have access to the shooter’s phone, it asked Apple to unlock it. The company refused.

Apple has spoken out strongly against a US government order requiring the company to create a backdoor to bypass iPhone encryption, citing significant security risks to users.

The company argues that such a backdoor could be exploited repeatedly and would put the data security of millions of people at risk. Apple emphasizes the far-reaching implications of this requirement, claiming that it undermines decades of security advances designed to protect users from cyber threats. The dispute highlights the tension between national security needs and protecting individual privacy.

“We do not take opposition to this order lightly. We believe we must speak out in the face of what we see as an overreach by the U.S. government,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a statement. “We oppose the FBI’s requests with the deepest respect for American democracy and love for our country. We believe it would be in everyone’s best interest to step back and consider the implications. While we believe the FBI’s intentions are good, it would be wrong for the government to force us to build a back door into our products. And ultimately, we fear this request would undermine the very freedoms and liberties our government is supposed to protect.”