How the police get your prescription
America's largest pharmacy chains are handing over customers’ most intimate medical records in the store. And it's completely legal.
Full story: Pharmacies share medical data with police without a warrant, inquiry finds
My latest piece is on a totally unnerving and completely legal technique of law enforcement data gathering. Cops are walking into pharmacies and leaving with the most sensitive details of your medical history:
In briefings, officials with America’s eight biggest pharmacy giants — Walgreens Boots Alliance, CVS, Walmart, Rite Aid, Kroger, Cigna, Optum Rx and Amazon Pharmacy — told congressional investigators that they required only a subpoena, not a warrant, to share the records.
A subpoena can be issued by a government agency and, unlike a court order or warrant, does not require a judge’s approval. To obtain a warrant, law enforcement must persuade a judge that the information is vital to investigate a crime.
Officials with CVS, Kroger and Rite Aid said they instruct their pharmacy staff members to process law enforcement requests on the spot, saying the staff members face “extreme pressure to immediately respond,” the lawmakers’ letter said.
More to read
- “The first instance of an adult pregnant woman asking a court for permission to terminate her pregnancy under an abortion ban since Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973.”
- The Post keeps an updated list of states where abortion is banned or under threat. Nearly one in three women ages 15 to 44 live in states where the procedure is banned or mostly banned.
- I wrote earlier this year about how data brokers sell information on our mental health. Again, completely legal.
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