February Friday 10th 2006 (23h09) :
Police blotter: Patriot Act e-mail spying approved
http://bellaciao.org/en/article.php3?id_article=10304
Police blotter: Patriot Act e-mail spying approved
By Declan McCullagh Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: February 9, 2006, 5:46 PM PST TalkBack E-mail Print
"Police blotter" is a weekly report on the intersection of
technology and the law.
What: The Justice Department asks a judge to approve Patriot Act
e-mail monitoring without any evidence of criminal behavior.
When: Decided Feb. 2, 2006 by U.S. District Judge Thomas Hogan
in Washington, D.C.
Outcome: E-mail surveillance approved.
What happened: As part of a grand jury investigation that’s
still secret, the Justice Department asked a federal magistrate
judge to approve monitoring of an unnamed person’s e-mail
correspondents.
The request had a twist: Instead of asking to eavesdrop on the
contents of the e-mail messages, which would require some
evidence of wrongdoing, prosecutors instead requested the
identities of the correspondents. Also included in the request
was header information like date and time and Internet
address--but not subject lines.
The federal magistrate judge balked and asked the Justice
Department to submit an additional brief to demonstrate that
such a request would be legal.
Instead, prosecutors asked Judge Hogan to step in. He reviewed
the portion of federal law dealing with "pen register" and "trap
and trace" devices--terms originating in the world of telephone
wiretapping--and concluded it "unambiguously" authorizes the
e-mail surveillance request.
Though the language may be clumsy, Hogan said, the Patriot Act’s
amendments authorize that type of easily obtainable surveillance
of e-mail. All that’s required, he said, is that prosecutors
claim the surveillance could conceivably be "relevant" to an
investigation.
Excerpt from the court’s opinion: "In 2001, Congress enacted the
Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools
Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001 (the
"USA Patriot Act"), Section 216 of which explicitly amended the
authorities relating to pen registers and trap and trace
devices...by expanding the definitions of these devices to
include "processes" to obtain information about "electronic
communication."
"Commenting on the very language that was finally enacted in
Section 216 of the USA Patriot Act, several members of Congress
highlighted the fact that the amendments would bring the state
of the law in line with current technology by making pen
registers and trap and trace devices applicable to the Internet
and--more to the point--e-mail.
"For example, a section-by-section analysis of the bill that
Representative John Conyers included in the record before the
final House vote, which contains the same language that was
finally enacted by Congress, states that Section 216 "extends
the pen/trap provisions so they apply not just to telephone
communications but also to Internet traffic."
In other news: Keeping watch on the NSA BlackBerry brinkmanship
Photos: The new sound of music Analyzing athletic prowess What
are Amazon’s search intentions? At Demo, seeking the perfect
pitch "In addition, Senator Jon Kyl, who is currently Chairman
of the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism,
Technology & Homeland Security, noted that the same language in
the Senate version of the bill "would codify current case law
that holds that pen/trap orders apply to modern communication
technologies such as e-mail and the Internet, in addition to
traditional phone lines."
"The Congressional Research Service also published a legal
analysis of the USA Patriot Act that states that the Act
"permits pen register and trap and trace orders for electronic
communications (e.g., e-mail)."
"The plain language of the statute makes clear that pen
registers and trap and trace devices may be processes used to
obtain information about e-mail communications. The statute’s
history confirms this interpretation and there is no support for
a contrary result."
http://news.com.com/Police+blotter+...
By : TruthBeFree
February Friday 10th 2006
http://bellaciao.org/en/article.php3?id_article=10304
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