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Be careful with your requests.

Banker Lee Harbert from San Francisco in January 2005 shot down a man to death and fled the scene of the crime. Three years later he was convicted. Not without the help of Google.


Conducting the investigation, which already seemed to be at a deadlock (the accused claimed that Jaguar received damage from a “meeting” with a deer, and it was impossible to prove otherwise), the police looked at the information on the accused's computer. And here are interesting facts. It turns out that a couple of days after the incident, Harbert searched Google for information about what he had done.

The search query "hit-and-run" was the most successful. And he brought a comrade to the page, which contained information about the incident in which he participated. There were other inquiries concerning the purchase of spare parts for the car, which confirmed the suspicion that Harbert's car was damaged and required repair or replacement of spare parts. This has become the missing part of the evidence base. As a result, Lee Harbert sat down for three (only!) Years.
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So, gentlemen, be careful with requests. You should not search Google for information about the crime that you committed. It is fraught.

via gizmodo , cnet

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/49657/


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