FBI: Absolutely Nothing Found On San Bernardino’s iPhone

Fact checked
Investigators say nothing was found on the iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters

The FBI have announced that there is absolutely nothing of interest on the iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino terrorists, two weeks after unlocking the device. 

The agency had hoped to find information which would have led them to foreign terrorists left on the iPhone 5C belonging to Syed Farook.

For the FBI to competently investigate a mass murder that happened in the United States, we believed we had to use all lawful tools to find out whether there was evidence on that phone that either shed more light on what these two killers had done,” FBI Director James Comey told Ohio’s Kenyon College last week.

RT.com reports:

However, a law enforcement official told CBS News on Wednesday that no relevant information has yet been discovered by the agency.

The idea that the passcode-protected phone could contain information on terrorist contacts or further planned attacks was at the center of a high-profile legal battle between the agency and Apple earlier this year. The FBI tried to force the tech giant to create a custom operating system for them to access, a so-called backdoor, and Apple vowed to resist the order all the way to the Supreme Court in order to protect the privacy of its customers.

The legal tug of war came to an abrupt halt in late March, when the FBI announced that it managed to access Farook’s iPhone with the help of an unnamed third party instead of Apple.

The technique used to open the phone wasn’t disclosed to the public or to Apple, and there’s a possibility that it never will be, according to Comey.

“If we tell Apple, they’re going to fix it and we’re back where we started,” he said, according to CBS News. “As silly as it may sound, we may end up there. We just haven’t decided yet.”

2 Comments

  1. And stealing anyones private information against their will without their express consent is treason.

  2. And stealing anyones private information against their will without their express consent is treason.

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