Systems used by courts and govs across the US riddled with vulnerabilities

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Tamerlin

Ars Scholae Palatinae
642
And, to make matters worse, judges and courts have started sending out questionnaires to potential jurors and telling them that they say are "legally required to answer". The questionnaires include information such as:
Social Security Number
Date of Birth
Mother's Maiden Name
Places that you've lived
Marital status
Name of spouse

I've chewed out two judges over this; neither one seemed to understand that those questionnaires would be a windfall to any identity thief.

One thing we've seen repeatedly is that in america judges aren't selected based on competence, intellectual capacity, or integrity. They're chosen based on how easily they can be purchased by the federalist treason society.
 
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Tamerlin

Ars Scholae Palatinae
642
Many, perhaps most, public libraries offer access to Westlaw and/or Lexus/Nexus. There may or may not be a small fee, but you don't have to subscribe to the service just to check on one case. If it's a large library system, call the main branch; otherwise, call the reference desk of your local branch.

It's Lexis/Nexis, no relation to Lexus. I was working with some folks at Lexis/Nexis once while the company got itself into a major scandal because someone registered an account, claimed to be a police officer, and acquired something like 10,000 personal records. I've seen the kind of data that those records include, and I assure you that you would not want any random bozo having access to that information.

Lexis/Nexis isn't particular trustworthy.
 
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