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To: discostu
Destroying evidence has been illegal for a long long time. I don’t even think it’s a new development to consider your browser history evidence.

And I've been known to delete my browser history so my wife won't get the popups on her computer that tell her which gifts I'm looking at. Also being a Freeper, I investigate a lot of stories I read here and may go to some nefarious sites. If you put these two activities together I could to be guilty of a felony. With more and more people thinking like you we are close to embracing a police state.

76 posted on 06/08/2015 8:24:54 AM PDT by Starstruck (I'm usually sarcastic. Deal with it.)
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To: Starstruck

No those facts don’t put you in line for a felony. It’s people thinking like you that make us look like paranoids with no grounding in reality. Evidence destruction laws are very well established with over 100 years of jurisprudence. This guy got in trouble specifically for deciding the evidence trail on his friends might go through his computer and deliberately destroying the evidence. Unless you’ve got some wrong doing you’re trying to hide there is NOTHING AT ALL illegal about clearing your history. This is known, understood, and documented, and trying to pretend like this case changed any of that is just making crap up.


77 posted on 06/08/2015 8:48:08 AM PDT by discostu (In fact funk's as old as dirt)
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