A
woman in Texas, US used Apple’s Find My iPhone app to track down the
body of her husband after he didn’t come home one night and the app
revealed that he was at a location only half an hour from the family
home.
Carla
Melendez of Harris County, Texas, says that she was worried when her
husband, Ramiro Acosta, 23, didn’t come home on Wednesday night, 13
January. She told local news channel ABC 13 Eyewitness News that he had previously been a gang member, and even though he was “done with that”, he might still have a lot of enemies.
Concerned, she opened the Find My iPhone app on her iPhone,
which had been linked to Acosta’s iPhone, and used it to track his
whereabouts, only to find that her husband seemed to be at a location
that was only 30 minutes away from their home.
Early
in the morning on Thursday, 14 January, when she saw that the pulsing
dot representing her husband’s phone was still at the same location,
Melendez decided to investigate. She drove to the area indicated by the
app and found her husband’s body located by some trees along the side of
a road called Turkey Drive, off Aldine Westfield Road. He had been shot
once in the torso.
“[The
app] showed trees and it was weird, because why would his phone be by
trees? And it was there for a while,” said Melendez. “If somebody saw
something please say something. He didn’t deserve to be thrown like
this, like a dog in the street. I just wanted him to wake up, god knows
how long he was laying there.”
Investigators
with the Harris County Sheriff’s Department say they don’t have a lot
of information currently and are appealing for anyone who might have
information about Acosta’s death to come forward.
The idea of civilians doing their own detective work using the Find My iPhone app is becoming a rising trend. In 2015, a Canadian teenager was shot dead after he tracked his stolen smartphone from thieves in Ontario; two UK women used the app to catch a handbag thief when police were too busy to respond to their call; and a businessman tracked his iPhone 5S down after it survived a 9,300ft drop from an aeroplane in Texas.
No comments:
Post a Comment