POLICE and family members have
concerns for a 13-year-old Victoria girl who has been missing from her
home for more than two days ago.
Forest Hill teenager Natalia Barbaccia was last seen leaving her home in Catherine Court about 11.30pm (AEDT) on Monday.
He mobile phone is switched off and it's believed she does not have any money on her.
Due to her age and the length of time she has been missing, police and family members have concerns for her welfare.
Natalia, who left home barefooted, has brown hair and eyes and was wearing a black jumper, dark leggings and black socks.
news.com.au 21 Mar 2013
With the very public matter of the disappearance of Irish Jill Meagher ( a story that was a meal ticket to the media outlets), and the later capture of her 'alleged' assailant Adrian Ernest Bayley, who later led police to the place where he buried Jill's body, the graphic description of how he was caught followed.
With this in mind, the corporate media published (with the authority's approval) , a well known secret within government and the telco's and the police force - how mobile phones are (real time) tracking devices.
Mobile phones are also capable of tracking the user even when turned off.
To the layman this may seem like science fiction, or 'Star Trek "stuff"', but it's actually (20 year old) technology with remote access capabilities, nothing special really.
As demonstrated to the public, a recent so called Facebook 'bug':
Facebook flaw exposed users' webcams
http://corpau.blogspot.com.au/2013/01/facebook-flaw-exposed-users-webcams.html
Similarly mobile phones can be listened to by operators by turning on the microphone remotely.
Telco's have also been listening to domestic home / business users by turning on the land line's phone headsets, a fact known by the authorities and not the general populous
Just because the missing teenager Natalia's phone is switched of does not mean the authorities do not know where the phone (not necessarily she) is.
How dirty politics killed a child
Only a few years ago, a young boy in New South Wales was lost, and dialed the Australian emergency number '000'.
When speaking to operators he could not describe where he was, therefore allegedly thwarting attempts by emergency services to locate him. As a result he died.
The authorities could track his whereabouts by tracing the location of his mobile phone, but this would mean the public disclosure of how mobile phones are used to track people, which was not on the political agenda of the day, nor it really still is today.
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