As a person involved in some of these issues... I do have to make a couple of statement before everyone overreacts...
1) Do not consent to a search. Ever. Simply say no. If they have probable cause or reason to search they don't need your consent, so they can do it anyway, so they don't need to ask if they already have a reason to search. The nature of
Terry stops is pretty settled case law in alot of areas.
2) Consent to search your vehicle is not consent to search everything IN the vehicle. There are still limitations. So even if you screw up, don't panic, just note what they do search. Containers are a no no in alot of cases, and your phone is considered a "container." If you hand over your cell phone and say, "ok"... sure... but why would you do that anyway.
3) These readers are the same things they use to grab yoru data at the cell phone store, this isn't some new technology. The specific model is, but the overall concept isn't too hard to grasp. Its been around awhile.
This specific incident has been overblown. I know some KS/MO LEOs and they haven't heard of them, I haven't seen many cases involving it, and data mining, while exciting in concept involves a lot of work to be introduced as actual evidence. Most vice teams/the Feds aren't really looking at your cell phone as some great lead, you still have to be interesting enough to pursue, and as overstretched as LEOs are these days, its not likely.
On this specific story, the ACLU backed off and said its initial claim was overblown.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-20055961-83.html
Its just a handful... again. Budget cuts have been wracking everyone lately.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-...#ixzz1K4JGcB7c
http://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw/in..._phone_da.html
http://www.gsnmagazine.com/node/23077
Now, having said all of this. The main point is still valid.
Don't consent. If arrested, DONT talk to the cops. They are not your friends, they are the investigative arm of the state and their role in investigations is to collect data for the prosecutors. Don't make their job easy. If you consent, your lawyer cannot file motions to suppress/limine/etc to help you out (although they should anyway... might be able to challenge your consent, yadda yadda...)
Technology is always hackable. Your account here at ECCIE is not totally safe, no matter what you are told. Even if the account itself is protected there are a million inroads into them, and the physical servers, your computer, what not is always evidence. Use the internet to educate yourself on basic security, how to scrib your hard drive to DOD standard, etc etc... all of this may be for naught, but unless the Feds and their wizzes want a crack at you, the harder (and more EXPENSIVE) you make the prosecutors job, the more likely they are to cut a deal. Yes, prosecution has a price tag and in this era, you can use that to your advantage to help defend your
innocence.
Technology isn't safe, don't be silly. However, thoughts of all KS/MO LEO cars rampantly stealing data is overblown. The device requires hookup, is expensive and probably requires a warrant before it can be used at all. It's most likely use is in ongoing investigations where the phone in question is in evidence and is being analyzed.
There is software that can be remote loaded onto laptops to activate your camera (I tell folks to put a sticker over it...) etc etc... but like terrorism if you live in fear, you'll just hurt your own quality of life more.
Just adding some balance, however, once again... to be clear, the main point is valid. Consent bad. mmmmkay? Anything you say and will be used against you
Be well... Be safe... Have fun!
Note: I hope this is all taken informationally, educationally and recreationally. None of it is actual legal advice, just reasoned discussion.