Joseph 

 

What the heck is that all about. He just wants to know who's phone it is
before returning it. The phone was found in a "sensitive" area in his
office, he has the right to know the owner. More than likely it is a phone
of an employee's family or friend, that came for lunch or to pick them up,
and not a big deal.  This is a group about t-mobile phones, not judging
others. 

 

Clyde

 

On Dec 13, 2006, at 14:31, Core Cartwright wrote:

> As a lawyer it makes sense to me. I would want to know whether the 
> phone was used to evesdrop on a confidential conversation.
>
>
>> I'm not sure why you have to know this. Considering that Verizon
> said that they'd contact the owner of the phone if they can determine
> who that is.

I'm amazed if you're a lawyer that you'd want to snoop in somewhere 
that you have no business. Snooping into someone else's business 
would make you ripe I'd think to get sued!

How are *you* going to determine whose conversation was 
"evesdropped" (sic)? Seems to me that you would be the one who was 
breaking the law. Are lawyers above the law?

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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