Relationships come and go. Some people take them well, some not so much.
We’ve covered fake data requests before and the article that Michael recently sent this network talks about such a suspect who basicly said that if they couldn’t have the victim, nobody could.
The victim who was not named, feared for their lives as the suspect traveled from New Mexico to North Carolina. What police found in the car besides a knife on his person is discussed within the article.
When one girl broke up with me, I wanted to understand what I had done wrong, as we all need to learn. But there was really no reason for me to travel to a different state if I wasn’t wanted, even though I did like them and found nothing I had done wrong as an example story.
Verizon Wireless gave a female victim’s address and phone logs to an alleged stalker who pretended to be a police officer, according to an affidavit filed by an FBI special agent. The man, Robert Michael Glauner, was later arrested near the victim’s home and found to be carrying a knife at the time, according to the affidavit submitted in court yesterday.
Skipping some, two paragraphs state:
Glauner and the victim met in August or September 2023 on xhamster.com, a porn website with dating features, and “had an online romantic relationship,” the affidavit said. The victim ended the relationship, but Glauner “continued to contact or try to contact” her, the document said.
Glauner tricked Verizon into providing sensitive information by sending an email and fake search warrant to , the email address for the Verizon Security Assistance Team (VSAT), which handles legal requests. Verizon didn’t realize the request was fraudulent even though it came from a Proton Mail address rather than from a police department or other governmental agency, according to the affidavit filed yesterday by FBI Special Agent Michael Neylon.
While the cop was fake, the judge who supposedly signed the fake PDF file sent to Verizon was a real judge who verified that this was not them signing the document and it was missing things.
The suspect kept calling Verizon and sending email demanding correct info.
While the victim and family were gone for the evening, the suspect arrived at the residence where he was promptly arrested as the bottom of the article covers.
To read the full article, read Verizon fell for fake “search warrant,” gave victim’s phone data to stalker from Ars Technica in cooperation with 404 media.
Please stay safe out there, thanks so much for reading.