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Apr 19, 2015

FBI ruse violated man's rights: US judge

THE FBI violated the rights of a wealthy Malaysian businessman when agents posed as internet repairmen to get into his Las Vegas suite to search for evidence of wrongdoing during the World Cup last summer, a federal judge ruled.
HIS ruling threw out evidence collected last July from Wei Seng "Paul" Phua's high-security luxury villa at Caesars Palace.
"The government violated the defendant's Fourth Amendment rights" against unreasonable searches and seizures, US District Judge Andrew Gordon said in a bluntly worded decision.
Phua's lawyers said they were stunned to learn that investigators enlisted a Caesars contractor to shut off internet access so agents disguised as repairmen could enter with hidden cameras.
"Law enforcement can't break something in your house and pose as repair people to get inside," defence attorney David Chesnoff said.
The defence lawyers accused the FBI of deceiving a magistrate judge who granted a search warrant by failing to disclose the tactics used to find probable cause and leaving any reference to the ruse out of investigative reports.
Officials with the FBI referred messages seeking comment to the US lawyer's office in Las Vegas, which didn't immediately respond.
Gordon's 22-page ruling effectively guts the criminal prosecution of a man authorities characterised as a top member of an Asian organised crime syndicate who flew to Las Vegas last summer on his private jet after having been arrested and charged with operating an illegal sports betting business in the Asian gambling hub of Macau.
The decision, however, doesn't kill the case outright.
Prosecutors said some $US13 million ($A16.66 million) in bets had been wagered before the FBI, working with Nevada gambling regulators, raided three Caesars Palace villas where Phua, his son and several other people were staying.
Agents seized computers, mobile phones and cash.
Federal prosecutors conceded mistakes but argued that the government did nothing malicious and had not violated Phua's constitutional rights.
Prosecutor Kimberly Frayn argued that internet service isn't an essential service like electricity, air conditioning or water, and that people in the Caesars Palace villas weren't compelled to invite in the agents disguised as repairmen.
Phua, 50, was the last remaining defendant among eight people arrested in the case, including his son Darren Wai Kit Phua, 23.
Darren Phua was the last of six defendants to plead guilty to lesser charges, forfeit large amounts of money and return to Asia under plea deals banning them from travel to the US for five years. Charges against one defendant were dismissed.

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