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Excellent point, but as I've said previously they could have accomplished that with a friendly subpoena. I still firmly believe the search warrant was an unnecessary move designed to intimidate Mr. Chen. Unless he has something to hide, complying with a subpoena request for information on his computers would be far less invasive and he'd have his equipment back within a few days. With a search warrant, the computers will be classified as evidence and he will be lucky to get them back before they're obsolete.
It's worse than that, really. For a guy like this his computers are his livelihood. The data on his computers, especially his servers, are also likely to be vitally important. Seizing someone's property is inconvenient, but in a case like this it might be financially ruinous if not returned within a few days.




Member since:
2005-07-06
...that they are investigating how the phone got outside of an Apple facility and ended up in a bar. Absconding with Gizmodo's computers could be part of the effort to determine who "lost" the phone.