Year: 2021

Police use Apple Watch to help find kidnapped women

A man is facing kidnapping charges after he allegedly kidnapped a women and put her in the back of his truck.  The women then used her Apple Watch to summon police where they could track them and rescue her.

According to Fox29 in San Antonio, Texas:

Police in Selma, northeast of San Antonio, were called out to Lookout Hollow Circle on December 16 after a report of a kidnapping.

When they arrived, officers spoke to a girl who told them her mother had been kidnapped. She said her mother and Adalberto Longoria were outside of an apartment arguing when the girl heard her mother scream. The girl told police she heard the screaming from the parking lot, but did not know where she was taken.

Around 10 to 15 minutes later, the woman called the girl through her mobile watch, telling her Longoria had kidnapped her and wanted to hurt her. As she was speaking to her mom, the mobile watch was suddenly disconnected.

Officers used an emergency cellular ping to track the woman’s mobile phone. The watch showed the victim’s location on East Sonterra Blvd at the Hyatt Place Hotel. When police arrived, they found the woman in a vehicle in the parking lot. Longoria had unfortunately already fled the scene on foot, police said.

The victim told police she and Longoria were fighting, and Longoria had refused to give up the vehicle. He told her to get her things out of the bed of the truck. When she went to do this, Longoria allegedly got in the driver’s seat and drove away with her still in the bed of the truck. The victim told police he was allegedly drunk at the time.

 

Apple elaborates on potential medical device interference from iPhone 12 MegaSafe Accessories

Since the launch of the iPhone 12 at the end of last year, it has said that MegaSafe accessories may cause interference with some medical devices, such as a pacemaker, because of electromagnetic interference causing some devices not to function properly when around some equipment.

Apple has now added a new support document stating this fact.  It reads in part:

Medical devices such as implanted pacemakers and defibrillators might contain sensors that respond to magnets and radios when in close contact. To avoid any potential interactions with these devices, keep your iPhone and MagSafe accessories a safe distance away from your device (more than 6 inches / 15 cm apart or more than 12 inches / 30 cm apart if wirelessly charging). But consult with your physician and your device manufacturer for specific guidelines.

To read the entire document, click here.

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