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Last updated: 8/2008
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Chilling true-life stories
by Grant Hall
author of Privacy Crisis
If you wonder whether privacy is important, just ask Philip Lyons, Virginia Shelton or the family or friends of Maria Rivero and Juan Sarol-Cepero. As reported by MSNBC, their privacy was invaded with disastrous personal consequences:
Arrested for arson after using a club card. Washington state firefighter Philip Lyons was arrested for arson after a fire at his home. Investigators obtained Lyons’ supermarket club card and discovered he had purchased fire starters—the same type found at his home—prior to the incident. He was arrested only to be released later when someone else took responsibility for the crime.
Spent three weeks behind bars after getting cash from an ATM. Virginia Shelton, her daughter, and a friend were arrested in connection with the strangulation of another woman near Washington, D.C. The key to their arrest was a videotape from an ATM when $200 was withdrawn from the murdered woman’s bank account soon after the killing. A judge ordered the the three women freed three weeks later after learning that the surveillance tape and bank transaction records were not synchronized.
Stalked and murdered after making cell phone calls. Maria Rivero and Juan Sarol-Cepero left Miami and headed for the Midwest. They were shot to death in Iowa by Rivero’s former boyfriend. When police arrested the boyfriend, they found he had copies of the couple’s cell phone bills, which he had apparently used to trace them.
These and other privacy horror stories are not uncommon these days. It used to be that your personal life was sacred—totally secret. Your home was your castle. Your life was your own.
That is no longer the case. For example:
Identity thieves are waiting to steal your name, your credit, your life.
Government snoops can eavesdrop on your phone calls.
If given a chance, computer hackers will ransack your hard drive, rob your personal files, run up charges on your accounts.
Private eyes and dangerous stalkers can track you day and night.
Employers can monitor your personal e-mails and Internet activity.
We’re in a privacy crisis few people comprehend. Unless you learn how to protect yourself, your safety and security are at risk!
Learn how to stay safe
Hi, I’m Grant Hall, author of Privacy Crisis. Privacy is not just a philosophy for me. I’ve had to learn about it and practice it. For four years, I avoided investigators, as my attorney advised me to do, to prevent a con artist from draining my finances through a meritless civil lawsuit. Privacy tactics enabled me to avoid all court appearances and escape this frivolous, expensive-to-defend case totally unscathed. I wasted no money on attorneys’ fees or court costs and had no judgment entered against me—all because of the principles and concepts I describe in Privacy Crisis.
These principles are especially important as we see continued erosion of personal freedoms and privacy.
In the nearly 400 carefully researched pages of Privacy Crisis, you will learn how to:
Lock out snoops from your credit files.
Live beneath the radar.
Escape stalkers.
Outwit identity thieves.
Prevent government phone taps.
Stop criminals from hacking into your computer.
Bank secretly.
Make money and assets invisible.
Stop wage garnishments.
Get a permanent driver’s license.
And much, much more.
All of this can be done legally. Let Privacy Crisis be your guide, and I promise that it will work for you as it has for me.
Learn how to protect yourself
Listen as Grant Hall goes live on 970 AM K-News radio in Las Vegas. He shares must-listen information about how you can safeguard your privacy and protect yourself, your family and your assets against physical and financial harm.