Connie Adams found it impossible to escape her ex-boyfriend. He would follow her as she drove to work or ran errands. He would inexplicably pull up next to her at stoplights and once tried to run her off the highway, authorities said. When he showed up at a bar she was visiting for the first time, on a date, Adams began to suspect Paul Seidler wasn’t operating on instinct alone. He wasn’t. Seidler had installed a satellite tracking device in Adams’ car, according to police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, 30 miles south of Milwaukee. “He told me no matter where I went or what I did, he would know where I was,” Adams testified at a recent court hearing. Police say Adams’ case and several others across the country herald an incipient danger: high-tech stalking. Just as the global satellite positioning system can help save lives, so can its abuse endanger them, advocates of stalking victims say. Full Story
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