Because a warrant typically allows the government to do something, but not you. E.g. police can search your house, but you don't have to tell them the murder weapon is actually in a desk drawer at work.
Unless this is a different warrant or not a warrant but something else, I suspect the feds wanted to search ("trash") the place and likel…
Because a warrant typically allows the government to do something, but not you. E.g. police can search your house, but you don't have to tell them the murder weapon is actually in a desk drawer at work.
Unless this is a different warrant or not a warrant but something else, I suspect the feds wanted to search ("trash") the place and likely then take a bunch of servers/computers/etc, and Liberty Safe just gave up the codes to avoid the mess.
Because a warrant typically allows the government to do something, but not you. E.g. police can search your house, but you don't have to tell them the murder weapon is actually in a desk drawer at work.
Unless this is a different warrant or not a warrant but something else, I suspect the feds wanted to search ("trash") the place and likely then take a bunch of servers/computers/etc, and Liberty Safe just gave up the codes to avoid the mess.
Turns out I was right: https://twitter.com/libertysafeinc/status/1699606598669459680
They were never even served a court order! They just handed the code over after the feds asked nicely through an official paper ("warrant").