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Liberty gives access to their safes but there are no back door master codes

And yet someone in this thread is claiming they were given a backdoor master codes for multiple safes. And I'm now seeing posts on other forums where people are calling their safe manufacturer, and they're being told there is indeed a master code.

I'm aware of lock reset procedures and access via S/N and registration but this is not the same.


waaayyyyy more complicated then that….
 
I bought a Canon safe with an analog dial because I didn’t trust the digital keypad. My dial went bad (10 years in) and I called Canon and they replaced it under lifetime warranty. I chose to go digital keypad. Once it arrived, I called customer service and they walked me through the install and provided me their access code that was built in and then explained how to program my own code. They said I could delete their code but that it was a good idea to keep it in case there were issues later on.

Didn’t bother me that they “know” how to get into my safe. Anyone can get in my safe with tools and time…it’s really just a glorified gun cabinet and only a slight deterrent to anyone who really wants to get in there.

I would open your safe faster then you can get someone from Liberty on the phone and I’m not even close as good as ruger762 ruger762
 
Then by all means explain it and clear the air...


Any 1/2 way decent manufacturer would require proof of ownership, it‘s a process takes many steps and days….including Liberty. I honestly have no clue why they bowed down to the man, I did not see that coming.
 
Any 1/2 way decent manufacturer would require proof of ownership, it‘s a process takes many steps and days….including Liberty. I honestly have no clue why they bowed down to the man, I did not see that coming.

Ok I know about that part, and I know the process because I've had to go through it before.

Is there some sort of master code tied to certain locks and/or safes?
 
Fort Knox looks good as well.

"Not all gun-safe companies readily hand over access to their customers’ products, even if law enforcement demands it.

A spokesman at Ft. Knox, a national gun safe and vault company, told The Federalist his company would only divulge safe combinations to law enforcement if a court specifically ordered it or a search warrant specifically named his company. He reiterated flatly that his company would never do what Liberty did without a court order.

Browning Safes, Champion Safe Co., and American Security (AMSEC) did not immediately respond to The Federalist’s request for comment. Their websites also did not explicitly state their policy on granting federal officials entry into their customers’ safes."

 
Well. having seen the results of many search warrants that resulted in sheet rock being ripped off walls, and car doors being removed and totally dismantled, so I'm not getting too upset that Liberty didn't insist that the safe be destroyed.

When the FBI shows up with a warrant, all bets are off. If they show up at your bank where you have a safe deposit box, the box is going to get drilled.

400 safe deposit box holders had the contents seized - with no notice, and who were never charged with a crime.


The raid, which effectively shut down U.S. Private Vaults, came two weeks after the business was charged in a sealed indictment with conspiracy to sell drugs and launder money. Some of the customers were storing criminal proceeds in their boxes, the government charged.

In their warrant request, the FBI and U.S. attorney’s office asked U.S. Magistrate Judge Steve Kim for permission to seize the store’s racks of safe-deposit boxes for forfeiture, but “not their contents.”
FBI seizes safe deposit box contents
 
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