if its a smart phone thenthrow it away cuz theyll be werever u are
You click on the button use and then you call 911 and you will be a police officer.
Yes, you can; that is what the Forensic scientists, and police do.
Anything they find from you regarding a crime.
It is possible for citizens to use reverse phone number lookup websites to find out who owns the cell phone in question. However, police and the authorities are able to track, trace and find phone owner details from just the cell phone number.
Fall down when you are in the icy cave, go all they way you can to the left. By a pile a bones, there is a cell phone. Call 911, and you will get a police hat.
People use the cell phone by calling or texting someone to get into touch with them. You have to click the buttons on the phone to use the phone.
Too many accidents are caused by using a cell phone while driving so the states and local governments along with the police are passing laws against using the phone.
Only if they have obtained a federal wiretap warrant from a federal judge.
The use of a cell phone is unlikely to be a constitutional issue.
People use the cell phone by calling or texting someone to get into touch with them. You have to click the buttons on the phone to use the phone.
The phone has always been used as a phone. Cell phones came from 1920's and the use of police radios. It wasn't until Dr. Cooper of Motorola in 1974 made the first cell phone for the government. Public selling the cell phones began in 1984. Often products do come from other types of developments or uses, but not the phone.
Obviously YES. It's technically stealing. Yes, it is illegal to use another person's cell phone without permission since that is a form of theft; in principal it is illegal even to use another person's coffee cup or pencil without permission, although such offenses are very petty and it is doubtful that the police would be willing to investigate them. If the unauthorized cell phone use resulted in a large expense for the cell phone owner, that is a more significant crime.