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Mostly people don’t care when we do good stuff and mostly it’s not noticed or remarked upon.
Like my supervisor saying “I’m not going to give you an attaboy for doing your job”.

Mostly people don’t care when we do good stuff and mostly it’s not noticed or remarked upon.
Yup. The comparison in the original article is absurd. A cop abusing their CPIC access and someone launching ransomware attacks through a botnet or a zero-day exploit are two very different things. The vast majority of cyber crime is not investigated or solved; there aren’t resources to do it with. But a cop or other government official who misuses databases is easily traced in their access and use of various systems. I’ve got personal experience in this sort of investigation a few times over… There’s often pretty comprehensive user access logging.Or perhaps government data systems have better access control logs, making it easier to prosecute misconduct.
An Ontario Provincial Police officer accused of breaking into her ex-boyfriend’s home while on duty three years ago has made a deal to have her criminal charges withdrawn.
Amanda Farrell, who turns 41 next week, was accused of assault, forcible confinement, criminal harassment, mischief to property, and breaking into the home uninvited, has entered into a peace bond to resolve her criminal charges in a virtual courtroom.
Armed police officer breaking into a citizens house and terrorizing them for 15 minutes gets a conditional sentence, no jail, and no criminal record. Always nice to see justice done.The upcoming Professional Standards investigation should be interesting...
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On-duty OPP officer accused of break-and-enter at ex-boyfriend’s home signs peace bond, charges dropped
An Ontario Provincial Police officer accused of breaking into her ex-boyfriend’s home while on duty three years ago has made a deal to have her criminal charges withdrawn.www.ctvnews.ca
You'd better have good notes to substantiate your access.Yup. The comparison in the original article is absurd. A cop abusing their CPIC access and someone launching ransomware attacks through a botnet or a zero-day exploit are two very different things. The vast majority of cyber crime is not investigated or solved; there aren’t resources to do it with. But a cop or other government official who misuses databases is easily traced in their access and use of various systems. I’ve got personal experience in this sort of investigation a few times over… There’s often pretty comprehensive user access logging.
We routinely do all kinds of queries in rapid succession when working an investigation, or following up a file to see if someone is involved in anything new that’s relevant, or if a matter’s gone through court yet or what have you… I doubt anyone’s taking notes on even most of their queries, never mind all of them. Most will be pretty easy to say why from memory or just by looking at what we were working on on a given day.You'd better have good notes to substantiate your access.
Crap! I know that. And we query folks and vehicles all day long for customs and immigration purposes.We routinely do all kinds of queries in rapid succession when working an investigation, or following up a file to see if someone is involved in anything new that’s relevant, or if a matter’s gone through court yet or what have you… I doubt anyone’s taking notes on even most of their queries, never mind all of them. Most will be pretty easy to say why from memory or just by looking at what we were working on on a given day.
Actual cases of abuse of databases tend to not be hard to demonstrate.
it’s a very common conduct issue presently (so hot right now) but it’s not cybercrime. That article groups things in a very strange way.We routinely do all kinds of queries in rapid succession when working an investigation, or following up a file to see if someone is involved in anything new that’s relevant, or if a matter’s gone through court yet or what have you… I doubt anyone’s taking notes on even most of their queries, never mind all of them. Most will be pretty easy to say why from memory or just by looking at what we were working on on a given day.
Actual cases of abuse of databases tend to not be hard to demonstrate.
Looks like Ottawa police responded to a pretty bad vehicle accident a few days ago at 1130pm. Open window, no driver in the car - cleared the scene.
Police went back the next day and found the drivers body a short distance away in the snow![]()