Courtney Jordan, Esq.

Courtney Jordan, Esq. Attorney | Former Federal Prosecutor | Felon — I built cases with these systems. Then they were used on me. Now I expose them.

03/31/2026

Palantir: The government system that connects every dot on you.

Palantir Gotham is used by FBI, Homeland Security, and local law enforcement to connect dots humans can't see. It aggregates your phone records, financial data, location history, social media, and public records.

The AI maps your entire social network, analyzes patterns to predict your behavior, and assigns risk scores. One connection to someone under investigation can flag your entire profile.

Palantir helped track January 6th participants and has been used in thousands of federal cases. The system runs 24/7, analyzing millions of Americans.

AI surveillance protection strategies in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol: https://www.courtneyjordanesq.com/resources

03/30/2026

Federal prosecutors can get your data before you know you're a target:

Grand jury subpoenas don't require a judge's approval. No probable cause. No notification to you.

What they can access: Phone records (18 months), banking history, location data, email headers, social media activity logs.

Most people find out when they get arrested or indicted. By then, prosecutors have built their entire case using your personal data. The investigation is complete before you know it started.

Federal investigation protection protocols in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol: https://www.courtneyjordanesq.com/resources

03/29/2026

Police can park a fake cell tower outside your house:

It's called a Stingray. It impersonates a cell tower and captures your phone's identity. Your phone automatically connects to the strongest signal - no notification, no warning.

Over 75 law enforcement agencies use Stingray devices. Legal requirements vary by jurisdiction - some need a court order, others don't.

Your phone can't tell the difference between a Stingray and a real tower. The FBI has used these in major cities for over a decade.

Local police departments now have their own.

Stingray detection protocols in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol. Link in bio.

03/28/2026

The one iPhone setting I changed after my federal case:

When I reviewed body camera footage from my arrest, I watched an officer pick up my phone and read all my notification previews. No passcode needed. No unlocking required. The previews were just sitting there, visible evidence.

Settings > Notifications > Show Previews > Never

Turn this off for every app. Your text messages, emails, app notifications - none should show previews without unlocking your phone.

Complete notification security protocol in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol. Link in bio.

03/28/2026

The one sentence that ends every law enforcement encounter:

“I am invoking my right to remain silent and I want a lawyer.”

This sentence invokes your Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and your Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The Supreme Court requires that you clearly and unambiguously invoke these rights.

Staying silent isn't enough. Saying “maybe I should talk to a lawyer” isn't enough. You must use clear, specific language.

Say it clearly and calmly. Say it once. Then stop talking completely until you have an attorney present.

Complete constitutional rights protection guide in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol. Link in bio.

03/27/2026

When police ask for your phone number, it feels routine. It's not.

That number is the master key to your entire digital surveillance profile. Call detail records show every number you've called, call duration, and cell tower locations. Subscriber information reveals your addresses, account activity, and authorized users.

This creates an instant map of your social network and daily routine. Most of this data requires only a subpoena, not a search warrant. Carriers store these records for years.

You have the constitutional right to refuse to provide your phone number during routine encounters. Unless you're under arrest or they have a warrant, it's voluntary.

Say: 'I prefer not to provide that information.' Don't elaborate.

Complete carrier records protection strategy in The Digital Self-Defense Protocol. Link in bio.

03/21/2026

iPhone setting detects unauthorized app access. Mine was off.

As a former federal prosecutor who should know about this stuff, I just discovered I had this setting disabled.

Settings → Privacy & Security → App Privacy Report → Turn it on.

Once enabled, it logs every time apps access your camera, microphone, or location — including when you're not actively using them.

What to watch for: Camera access at 3 AM. Location tracking from apps you never opened. Microphone access during calls that last longer than your conversation.

Turn this on, wait a week, then comment below: Which app's unauthorized access surprised you most?

03/15/2026

When you deleted WhatsApp, it showed you a confirmation that your data would be deleted.

That message was about your phone. The company still has everything.

WhatsApp — message history and metadata retained on servers. Account deletion must be requested separately. Even then, certain records are kept for legal compliance.

Facebook — messages, activity history, and connection data retained by Meta. A subpoena returns records regardless of whether you have the app installed.

iMessage — if iCloud backup is enabled, Apple can be compelled to produce your iMessage history. Deleting iMessage does not affect your iCloud backup.

Deletion from your device and deletion from a company's server are two completely different events.

Your certainty that it was gone was the most dangerous thing.

How to actually request data deletion — and what to do when they refuse — is inside The War Room. Link in bio.

03/13/2026

There is a setting on your iPhone feeding your location data to a company that sells it to law enforcement.

No warrant. No judge. No notification to you.

The warrant requirement only covers data the government takes. It does not cover data the government buys.

The company is called Fog Data Science. It purchases location data from the apps on your phone and sells a surveillance interface to law enforcement. Investigators can query your movements across months without appearing before a judge.

As a former federal prosecutor I know investigators can skip the warrant process entirely by purchasing this data from commercial brokers.

Fix it now:
Settings → Privacy & Security → Location Services → change every non-essential app to Never.

This stops future collection. It does not remove data that has already been sold. Come back next week — I will show you that step.

03/12/2026

Your iPhone has been logging a detailed record of every place you have ever been.

It hides the list from you. It does not hide it from law enforcement.

Apple shows you a summary — home, work, a neighborhood name. What law enforcement extracts off a seized device is every single record. The exact timestamps. The coordinates. Plotted on a map.

Settings → Privacy & Security → Location Services → System Services → Significant Locations

Tell me in the comments how many records were on your phone.

03/10/2026

Signal's official account confirmed it publicly.

Government officials and journalists had their Signal accounts compromised, not because the encryption failed, but because they were tricked into handing over their SMS verification code and PIN by a fake Signal Support Bot.

Your SMS verification code is only needed once, when you first sign up. If anyone asks for it after that, your account is being taken in real time.

Signal confirmed: Signal Support will never initiate contact via in-app messages, SMS, or social media.

I checked my own Signal settings this morning after reading this and found a gap I did not know I had. Screenshot the line above. Send this to everyone you know who uses Signal.

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Tulsa, OK

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