you. with cell phones now acting as a portal into our daily activity, law enforcement is increasingly dependent on them to gather criminal evidence. with police routinely going through phones, privacy advocates are warning about what that means for citizens rights sparking this headline, give up your password or go to jail. this story details the case of william montenez stopped by mismi police in tampa and marijuana violations, spent 44 days in jail after refusing to give his iphone pass code even after a judge issued a warrant. his lawyer says mish s police h reason to search his phone warning of a limitless search by authorities. the piece goes on to point out, while courts have determined that police need a warrant to search a cell phone, the question of whether police can force someone to share a pass code is far from settled with no laws on the books. joining me now to give us more on this is the author of that piece, nbc s john schuppe,
victims by locking them in here but the mob forced their way in lockyer to carter about the new record of sharpton and they believe the people would stick with the rods put stones in which is in the office the crowd was bloodthirsty i ve never seen anything like this there was a video on someone s phone warning people to stay vigilant because gangs were kidnapping children and stealing their organs. in monaco police have threatened jail time if anyone forwards explosive messages that can cause public panic. it s part of the campaign to quash rumors before they boil over and lead to. the measure stick on and added urgency in mali goes melting pot into religious tensions are never far from the surface here. today officers are in the hindu temple it s part of the campaign s outreach to influential religious leaders the message is familial
kelly: i m kelly wright in new york. frayed nerves in hawaii after a false alarm prompted fears of an incoming missile attack. a phone warning warned a million people of an incoming missile attack and to seek shelter. human error was the reason for the alert. officials say it was a mistake. the speaker of the hi house said someone just pushed the wrong button. a spokesman said in a routine internal test that started at 8:05 hawaii time when a shift change went into effect. it involved the emergency alert system and two minutes later a warning test was triggered statewide. 8 minutes later the warning was canceled. they stated the system had not been hacked. jesse: this week is the