Supreme Court to hear double jeopardy case on Alabama man accused of stealing fishing secrets

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Supreme Court to hear double jeopardy case on Alabama man accused of stealing fishing secrets
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The Supreme Court agreed this week to consider whether a defendant accused of hacking into a website that tracks hot spots for artificial fishing reefs can be retried after his attorneys said he was tried in the wrong venue.

Timothy Smith is a software engineer and avid fisherman in Mobile, Alabama, who was accused of hacking into a website of Pensacola, Florida-based company StrikeLines.

"The extortion count was predicated on Mr. Smith's alleged offer to remove his social media posts discussing StrikeLines' coordinates in exchange for deep-water grouper coordinates," according to court filings. Smith contends that he should have been acquitted for being tried in an improper venue and that he cannot be retried, arguing also that his case amounts to a double jeopardy dispute, which prohibits the government from prosecuting someone twice for the same crime.CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

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