Texas Police Invested Millions in a Shadowy Phone-Tracking Software. They Won't Say How They've Used It.
Goliad County police kicked off one human smuggling investigation not with a suspects name, but with a discarded receipt and cell phone surveillance software. In June 2021, Chief Deputy Tim Futch chased a speeding F-150 headed toward Houston on U.S. Highway 59; he believed the vehicle was carrying undocumented immigrants, concealed in the truck bed beneath plywood, according to a police report. Trying to evade the cops, the driver pulled into a ditch, and around 10 people bailed out and took off sprinting.
In the aftermath, Roy Boyd, the sheriff in this county of 7,000 situated halfway between Laredo and Houston, surveyed the scene. The driver proved hard to identify via the pickups plate. But, on the ground, he spotted a fresh receipt from a liquor store in Pasadena, a Houston suburb, he recalled in a June 2024 interview with the Texas Observer.
The stub of paper was enough, Boyd said, to justify deploying an expensiveand controversialartificial intelligence-powered surveillance tool called Tangles. A specially-trained analyst used the receipt, Boyd said, to conduct warrantless surveillance on the suspected driverand on other smart phone usersby utilizing a Tangles add-on feature called Webloc, which tracks mobile devices movements in a client-selected virtual area through a capability called geofencing.
After the bailout incident, Boyd acquired a license for the tool with about $300,000 in state border security grantsthough the sheriff admits that hes not a tech guy: In 2024, he still used a hand-me-down iPhone 10, which hit the market in 2017.
https://www.texasobserver.org/texas-police-invest-tangles-sheriff-surveillance/