Prophet, you've got some balls to start off the way you did in this thread and then have the audacity to complain about an aggressive response (which, you'll notice, questioned your understanding of the situation as opposed to attacking you as a person).
My response was arrogant and aggressive, as you put it, because that's the tone you decided to set in your analysis of the situation. In my experience, that mindset only responds to its equal. Next time, if you'd like a rational and calm response to your posturing on subjects you know little about, try starting off without acting like a know-it-all. I can be a know-it-all too, I readily admit it - but only on subjects I know something about.
This would have gone much smoother if you'd have kept your cool in this post... They don't teach public relations in border school?
Like I said, I'm responding to the tone that was set. And nothing that I've said here should reflect on my past employment experience... I'm posting entirely as a private citizen with some detailed knowledge of the subject.
I'm truly sorry if I've genuinely offended you or hurt your feelings, but the way you were going off you needed to be corrected as expediently as possible, and gently stating how wrong you were would not have done that - you would have ignored it and proceeded merrily on your way.
That said, no hard feelings. It's not you as a personal that I was verbally smacking, it's the limited knowledge and understanding you were presenting of the situation and subject at hand.
which strikes me as the legal equivalent of leaving a backdoor exploit in your source code.
It can be - depends on the court's interpretation. The situation would most likely not have occurred in this manner in Canada anyway. The point is completely moot, however, as this case is in the USA and subject solely to its laws.
As for the raised eyebrow to the child porn thing, you can PM/ICQ me if you want to ask about it.
According to MP, he was pulled aside for a second inspection because he was showing verbal hints of hiding the pr0n? Well at least I know the mechanism for how such searches are triggered.
Whoa hoss. I said that's what might have happened. Customs legislation provides for different types of secondary examinations which require different types of reasons. You'd need to hear the specific details of this case in the court room and have an understanding of the US Customs legislation in use in order to determine exactly why this guy was pulled aside. It's entirely context-dependent, and may even be determined by internal (and not publicly available) policies.
All I've really posted here is generic publicly-available information on the Customs process and how it works. If you want to know more about it in relation to this case, I'd suggest consulting the USCBP website and the US Department of Justice website.