The Patriot Act..It's not just for Terrorist Anymore!!
http://www.nysun.com/article/28232
February 28, 2006 Edition
Patriot Act E-Mail Searches Apply to Non-Terrorists,
Judges Say
BY JOSH GERSTEIN - Staff Reporter of the Sun
February 28, 2006
URL:
http://www.nysun.com/article/28232
Two federal judges in Florida have upheld the authority of individual
courts to use the Patriot Act to order searches anywhere
in the country for e-mails and computer data in all
types of criminal investigations, overruling a
magistrate who found that Congress limited such expanded
jurisdiction to cases involving terrorism.
The disagreement among the jurists about the scope of
their powers simmered for more than two years before
coming to light in an opinion unsealed earlier this
month. The resolution, which underscored the
government's broad legal authority to intercept
electronic communications, comes as debate is raging
over President Bush's warrantless surveillance program
and the duties of Internet providers to protect personal
data.
A magistrate judge in Orlando, James Glazebrook, first
questioned the so-called nationwide-search provision in
2003, after investigators in a child pornography probe
asked him to issue a search warrant requiring a
"legitimate" California-based Web site to identify all
users who accessed certain "password-protected" photos
posted on the site. The Web provider was not named in
public court records.
Magistrate Glazebrook said that in passing the Patriot
Act, formally known as the Uniting and Strengthening
America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act, Congress made
clear its focus was on terrorism. He said there was
nothing in the language Congress adopted in the days
after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that
suggested the nationwide-search provision should apply
to garden variety federal cases.
"The statutory language is clear and unambiguous in
limiting district court authority to issue
out-of-district warrants to investigations of terrorism,
and that language controls this court's interpretation.
The government has shown no legislative intent to the
contrary," the magistrate wrote. He also noted that many
of the examples given during legislative debate involved
terrorism. The then chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, Senator Leahy, a Democrat of Vermont,
described the nationwide-search language as applying in
terrorism cases, the court noted.
Magistrate Glazebrook denied the search warrant, but it
was recently disclosed that the government appealed to a
federal judge, G. Kendall Sharp, who granted it without
explanation.
The scenario played out again late last year, after
prosecutors presented Magistrate Glazebrook with an
application for a search warrant directed to a
Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Web portal, Yahoo. The
government asked that Yahoo produce web pages,
documents, and usage logs pertaining to two e-mail
addresses and a Web site allegedly linked to an Orlando
man, Earl Beach, under investigation for involvement in
child pornography. Magistrate Glazebrook allowed
searches of Mr. Beach's home and computers, but again
rejected prosecutors' request to acquire data located
across the country. "Congress has not authorized this
court to seize out-of-district property except in cases
of domestic or international terrorism," the magistrate
handwrote on the application.
Again, prosecutors appealed. Judge Gregory Presnell took
up the question and concluded that "it seems" Congress
did intend to authorize nationwide search warrants in
all cases, not just ones pertaining to terrorism.
However, the judge acknowledged that the language
Congress used was far from clear. "The court rejects the
assertions made by both the United States here and the
magistrate judge... that the statutory language is
unambiguous. Although the court ultimately comes to a
determination regarding the meaning of this language, by
no means is it clearly, unambiguously or precisely
written," Judge Presnell wrote.
The chief federal defender in Orlando, R. Fletcher
Peacock, said the dispute was a straightforward one
pitting literal interpretation against legislative
intent. "Judge Presnell was more willing to go behind
the language of the statute and look at the statutory
intent, and clearly Judge Glazebrook was not," the
attorney said.
One of the most striking aspects of the dispute is that
there appears to be no other published court ruling
addressing the nationwide-search provision, known as
Section 220. The magistrate involved cited no cases
directly on the point and neither did the government.
An attorney with a group that pushes for online privacy,
the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said yesterday that
the lack of published cases on the subject reflects the
fact that search warrant applications are presented
outside the presence of defense lawyers, often before a
defendant even knows he is under investigation. "It's
fairly typical that search warrants for electronic
evidence would be kept under seal," the privacy
advocate, Kevin Bankston, said. "In most cases, they
wouldn't be reported."
Mr. Bankston said there is no question that the Justice
Department wanted the Patriot Act to include
nationwide-search authority for all crimes, but whether
lawmakers accomplished that task is another question. "I
don't know that Congress knew what it was voting on," he
said.
Civil libertarians have objected to the
nationwide-search provision on the grounds that it
allows prosecutors the discretion to pick judicial
districts where judges are seen as more friendly to the
government. Critics of the Patriot Act have also warned
that allowing search warrants to be filed from across
the country will discourage Internet service providers
from fighting such requests even when they may be
unwarranted.
"The only person in a position to assert your rights is
the ISP and if it's in their local court, they are more
likely to challenge it if it is bad or somehow
deficient," Mr. Bankston said.
A spokesman for the prosecutors did not return a call
seeking comment for this story. However, the Justice
Department has said the nationwide-search provision was
"vital" to its investigation of the gruesome murder in
2004 of a pregnant Missouri woman, Bobbie Jo Stinnett,
whose unborn child was cut from her womb with a kitchen
knife. Investigators claim that they used the Patriot
Act authority to quickly obtain email evidence from an
Internet provider across state lines in Kansas. That
data led them to a woman who later confessed to the
attack, Lisa Montgomery.
In his ruling, Judge Presnell did not mention that
episode, but suggested it was simpler for the courts and
prosecutors to issue all warrants in a case from one
place.
"As a matter of judicial and prosecutorial efficiency,
it is practical to permit the federal district court for
the district where the federal crime allegedly occurred
to oversee both the prosecution and the investigation
(including the issuance of warrants) thereof," he wrote.
The government has also complained that the former
procedure caused court backlogs and delays in
jurisdictions, like northern California, that are home
to many Internet companies.
It is unclear whether any charges resulted from the 2003
investigation, but the suspect involved in the disputed
2005 search, Mr. Beach, was indicted earlier this month
on charges of possessing and distributing child
pornography. He has pleaded not guilty. A trial is set
for April.
Magistrate Glazebrook said in a brief interview
yesterday that he could not discuss the specific cases
that prompted the legal disagreement over the Patriot
Act, but that he expects the question to arise again.
"It is certainly something that will come up," he said.
"There are a lot of interesting issues surrounding
that."
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