Will the corporate media ever tell the herd population that Australia's police is not a lawful body?
Most definitely NOT, as it's not their job to INFORM the plebs about the law it is now?
So how can anyone REALLY trust the police force, especially when they do not work for the people.
Australia is still a (penal) colony of the British empire and the people are treated accordingly.
Here is what a tech publication (bestvpn) wrote about Australia's police 'force', from 22 March 2017 of the headline:
Police Everywhere Illegally Accessing Private Data
Police and intelligence agency workers often have access to vast 
amounts of people’s private data. Most of the time, that data is 
accessed in a legal manner using proper procedures. However, at times, 
rogue intelligence agents and police officers use their position of 
authority to access that data illegally. In Queensland, Australia, the 
problem is of epidemic proportions.
This week, the Queensland police force has once again been brought 
into the limelight due to the illicit behavior of a Brisbane police 
officer. The Australian 
Crime and Corruption Commission
 (CCC) – an agency founded in 2004 “to combat and reduce the incidence 
of major crime and corruption in the public sector” – has arrested a 
senior Brisbane police officer on hacking charges.
According to the investigative board, the unnamed law enforcement 
official accessed a police database ten times in 2016 for personal 
reasons. The police officer in question is said to be 43 years old, and 
according to the CCC, he illegally accessed Queensland Police Service’s 
QPRIME database to look at data unrelated to official police matters.
Multiple Charges
QPS Ethical Standards Command has been notified about the misuse of 
the database, and the officer in question is due to appear at the 
Southport Magistrates Court on 17 April. The 
charges are as follows:
- Three counts of Computer Hacking and Misuse pursuant to Section 408E (2) of the Queensland Criminal Code 1899.
- Seven counts of Computer Hacking and Misuse pursuant to Section 408E (1) of the Queensland Criminal Code 1899.
According to those parts of 
Section 408E, if found guilty the officer could face up to five years in jail:
“(1) A person who uses a restricted computer without the consent 
of the computer’s controller commits an offence. Maximum penalty—2 years
 imprisonment.
(2) If the person causes or intends to cause detriment or damage, 
or gains or intends to gain a benefit, the person commits a crime and is
 liable to imprisonment for 5 years.”
A Personal Touch?
The officer’s reasons for illegally accessing the database are 
currently unknown. However, if past cases of misuse are anything to go 
by, it is possible that the hacking may affect people who the police 
officer knew personally. Why? In the past, Queensland officers 
who accessed the database fell victim to temptation, using the database 
for personal gain.
Take last year’s case, for example, when a Queensland police officer 
was found guilty of hacking the details of 50 women that he met via a 
dating app. In another case, the QPRIME database was found to have been 
accessed illegally in excess of 1,400 times by police officers who 
looked at
 a former Bikini model’s criminal record. On that occasion, Renee Eaves 
decided to take legal action against up to 1,000 police officers and the
 state of Queensland itself.
Victimized
The former Miss Bikini World contestant had previously won a 
harassment case for being pulled over in her car for unsubstantiated 
traffic violations. Unbelievably, the police constable in question 
pulled her over approximately 20 times between 2004 and 2006. Ms 
Eaves used the Freedom of Information Act to find out that her file had 
been accessed 1,435 times.
The story goes 
on and on.
 Last year, the CCC admitted that it had received 483 allegations of 
internal privacy and information breaches. That was 7% more than in 
2015, which demonstrates that the problem is growing. Unlike the random 
harassment of the former Bikini model, most times the cases take on a 
rather personal touch.
On one occasion, a public servant was given an 18-month suspended 
sentence for accessing valuation and building inspection reports to help
 her make purchasing decisions. In another case, a police officer 
assessed the criminal records of a friend’s ex-partner in order to help 
out in a custody case.
Many Cases
In yet another case, a police officer was hit with a six-month 
suspended sentence for leaking car registrations and criminal records to
 a relative who was employed as a private investigator. In a final 
example,
 the Aussie netball star Laura Geitz was among a dozen people whose 
personal details were hacked by Broadbeach officer Stephen Patrick 
Wright.
On that occasion, the 40-year-old cop accessed the Queensland Police 
Service QPRIME database over 80 times. Considering that QPRIME holds the
 data of around a million Queensland residents, the escalating problem 
seems severe. In addition, despite the sentences specified in Criminal 
Code 1899/Section 408E, in most of those cases police agents were only 
handed a suspended sentence (which they will probably never serve). A 
suspended sentence, sadly, doesn’t appear to be a strong enough 
deterrent to quell the growing problem.
Losing Battle?
So, what does the CCC have to say? A spokesperson for it told me that
 they do have an ongoing strategic plan for dealing with illegally 
accessed police data. The CCC did also point out, however, that the 
“Police Commissioner has primary responsibility for discipline of police
 officers.” These are the directives that the CCC informed me about:
“Undertaking criminal investigations into police officers where the alleged offending would amount to a criminal offence.
Referring matters involving the improper access and release of 
confidential information to the Queensland Police Service Ethical 
Standards Command (ESC) for their action which may include the charging 
of police officers or disciplinary action. Often the CCC will also 
review how the ESC conducts their investigation to ensure it is carried 
out to an appropriate standard.
The CCC can conduct an audit of lower level police misconduct 
relating to improper access and release of confidential information to 
determine if the ESC are completing investigations appropriately.”
Around the World
Although Australians are suffering quite severely from this type of 
data misuse, in reality the problem is widespread, with similar cases 
occurring around the world. 
In the US,
 a Pembroke Pines police officer called Melodie Carpio was suspended in 
January for snooping. According to reports, she misused confidential 
databases about 500 times to snoop on fellow officers, her boyfriend’s 
ex-wife, and other people.
Her boyfriend’s ex-wife (and her new husband) appear to have been the
 subject of a morbid and jealous fascination for the Florida officer. 
She is said to have searched for each of them about 80 times on her 
work-issued laptop. The victimized couple complained to the Department 
of Law enforcement after suffering a hack of their social media 
accounts, and receiving letters and phone calls from loan agencies. They
 correctly suspected Carpio, who was soon proven to have been accessing 
data for nefarious ends.
Lack of Deterrents
Unbelievably, Carpio only had to serve a three-month suspension 
before being allowed back on the force. On her return, she was made to 
sign an agreement that specified that she would be terminated if she 
misused the system again, but one can’t help feeling that she got off 
way too lightly.
This isn’t the only time that important systems have been used in personal vendettas, either. In 2013 the 
LOVINT scandal
 involved an NSA officer who spied on his ex on his first day at work. 
That was only one of 12 reported cases of system misuse at the NSA in 
2013, with one man 
found to have snooped on nine women.
In 2012, eight employees of Essex Police in the UK, including three police officers, 
resigned
 due to illegally accessing personal data on the UK’s police network. 
This turned out to be the tip of the iceberg, with around 200 officers 
eventually 
discovered to have illegally accessed the system.
Another UK 
scandal
 centered around a program called Optic Nerve. That case involved 1.8 
million Yahoo accounts’ webcam photos being snooped on by GCHQ. Those 
images included huge amounts of explicit content, which spies had easy 
access to. Admittedly, this is slightly different to the police misuse 
cases. However, surveillance of any innocent person by the authorities 
should be severely frowned upon, and should never be considered 
acceptable (especially when it is of such a sensitive nature).
Frightening Prospects
Innocent people shouldn’t be subjected to dehumanizing intrusions, 
but as Wikileaks’ Vault 7 release proved, it is happening a lot. 
Institutionalized snooping is one reason why large databases should be 
viewed with suspicion. In France, for example, late last year the 
government 
introduced
 a biometric database for every citizen over the age of 12. It 
holds data for 60 million citizens, and access to it is available across
 a broad range of French agencies.
As this article proves, the problem with databases is that humans 
often fall prey to temptation. The inner workings of the mind can be a 
tormented and confusing place, and it is this side of human nature that 
often leads to misuse. All databases are a weak point, but biometric 
databases – which harbor the potential for identity theft – are the most
 concerning of all.