Can I get a subpoena to find out a restricted call that was made to me by someone impersonating an officer?
Tuesday, March 30th, 2010 at
6:26 am
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Filed under: Call Tracking
If it was a cell phone it would be difficult to track if they are on pre-pay instead of contract.
As for the subpoena, sorry but you are not an agent of the court so you can’t get one, you need the police or a lawyer to do that
Talk to the DA.
Yes it is a serious crime impersonating a police officer with the intent, to either do harm or defraud. You need to go to the Police Department and lodge a complaint, talk to a detective maybe this perp has made other impersonating calls.
you need to do this:
make sure that recording has a time stamp date on it.
then you’re in business..otherwise, you have nothing to match the number with.
ok, then you need to call the person’s wireless provider and do this thing call pretexting..hey, Hewlett Packard has been doing it so it must be Ok.
ok, if you didn’t get that joke, then move on to my next comment.
what you need is the person’s cell phone records. the only way to get those is from what is called ‘probable cause’.
nobody is going to give you those records without a subpoena and of course you need probable cause or..you need an ongoing case against that person..which would make it easier.
your best bet is pretexting.
I would go make a complaint at the District Attorney’s Office you live in..
That way you are starting a "paper trail" if things happen again, if nothing else.
Course, yes they do have the right to refuse to go after him/her if they think there is no proof that it happened or any danger in it.
You can have the phone company put a thing on your line to trace what comes in. You will have to keep a record of who made calls that come in.
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