TPMIdeaLab

Apple’s Lost iPhone Search Team Flashed Badges to Toss Man’s Home [Lost IPhone]

iphone 4


First reported by SF Weekly, it’s come to light Apple investigators looking for a lost iPhone prototype might’ve impersonated SF police officers to search the Bernal Heights home of Sergio Calderon. A family member tells us that at least three members of the team that searched the home flashed badges.

The San Francisco Police Department has no record of the search. Sergio Calderon is the man believed to be the suspect in a CNET story claiming a next-gen iPhone prototype was lost in a bar and possibly sold on Craigslist for $200.

Further, the police department has been unable to secure any information from Apple about the missing iPhone prototype—he department has received no cooperation from Apple.

SF Weekly reported that six officials showed up at Calderon’s home, one of whom is confirmed to be an Apple employee—Anthony Colon, a Senior Investigator for the company. A family member who ws present during the search told us that at least three members of the security team that searched the house had flashed badges and seemed like police officers. The team with badges consisted of two women and one man.

As reported by CNET in their original article, the team was allowed to search the house and Sergio’s computer for any information about the missing iPhone, after it was traced to the home with GPS. When that search turned up nothing they concluded that the iPhone wasn’t there and said that it “doesn’t look like it was.”

If the security team at any time represented themselves as SFPD, they’re in for a heap of trouble if Sergio files charges. Until that happens, the police can’t investigate.



The original version of the story appears here: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/vip/~3/roPdaeW3g1I/apples-lost-iphone-search-team-flashed-badges-to-search-mans-home

Gizmodo is dedicated to gadgets, gizmos, and cutting-edge consumer electronics. Its tech-hungry audience stops by frequently to check out the newest products and recommendations for laptops, cell phones, PDAs, digital cameras, home entertainment, and other shiny new toys. Widely viewed as an authority in tech media, Gizmodo publishes breaking news and reviews 60 times per weekday.

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