Even
as the entire world going nuts over FBI’s request to Apple for
unlocking the iPhone belonging to According to an LA Times report, LAPD
detectives quietly hacked into a locked iPhone 5s despite the phone
having a keycode.
While the whole world questioned the intentions
of US authorities in asking Apple to unlock iPhone 5c belonging to the
San Bernardino shooter, LAPD was able to quietly hack the elder sibling,
iPhone 5s without any help from Apple.
Los Angeles police
investigators have discovered a workable method to bypass the hardened
security features of a locked iPhone 5s belonging to the slain wife of
“The Shield” actor Michael Jace, according to the court papers reviewed
by
The LA Times.
Michael
Jace is accused of shooting and killing his wife April Jace at their
South L.A. home in 2014 on May 19, 2014. Investigators say that the
actor and wife argued “about their relationship” via text message
shortly before he opened fire. The police wanted to access the phone to
determine whether or not this was the case.
LAPD Detective Connie
Zych wrote that on March 18, the department found a “forensic cellphone
expert” who could “override the locked iPhone function,” as per the
search warrant filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
What is
more interesting is that this appears to have occurred during the time
that the FBI was demanding Apple unlock the earlier model iPhone 5c of
San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook. In that high-profile case,
the FBI finally unlocked the phone with the help of professional
hackers, paying them up to $1 million for a tool exploiting security
vulnerability. The FBI had not withdrawn court proceedings against Apple
until March 28.
According to the warrant, a senior investigator
with the district attorney’s office was able to examine the phone in
April, as was Jace’s private cellphone expert.
The search warrant
did not detail the method used by the LAPD to open the phone, nor did
police disclose the identity of the cellphone expert, nor the version of
iOS installed on the phone used by April Lace. However, it raises
questions about why the FBI was still insisting in the San Bernardino
case that it could not access the iPhone 5c, which does not have a
Secure Enclave and should be less challenging to hack without Apple’s
help.
The FBI, which later managed to access the 5c without
Apple’s help, said that the method only worked on a limited number of
iPhones. It apparently cannot be used on any new iPhone, and it cannot
be used on the iPhone 5s.
It is unclear whether the phone offered
any significant information. On the other hand, Michael Jace is
currently awaiting trial.
Apple has been staunchly opposed to
hacking iPhones, or creating a security backdoor for law enforcement
officials, on account of the fact that it would set a dangerous
precedent with regards to privacy.
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