Rome News-Tribune

Protect privacy at American border

- From Los Angeles Times

In a recent op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, naturalize­d U.S. citizen Lubana Adi detailed how Customs and Border Protection agents seized and searched her phone without a warrant when she returned from visiting her family in Turkey. “Does the 4th Amendment apply to Muslim citizens at LAX?” she asked.

The sad truth is that its core protection­s don’t seem to apply to any U.S. citizen at the border, where customs agents are as free to pore through hard drives as they are to scrutinize roller bags and backpacks. This so-called border exception to the 4th Amendment has a long history. The very first Congress called for warrantles­s searches at the border to ensure the proper collection of duties; since then, the rationaliz­ation expanded to include the need to block contraband, such as illegal drugs and child pornograph­y.

As laptops and smartphone­s proliferat­ed, though, border agents began using the exception to seek something other than smuggled goods or contraband — they’re looking for evidence that the device’s owner is up to no good. Such searches multiplied in the last two years of the Obama administra­tion, rising from 4,700 in 2015 to almost 24,000 in 2016, The Associated Press reported. The Trump administra­tion has multiplied them again, with searches on pace to hit 60,000 this year.

Searches conducted without even a reasonable suspicion of unlawful activity aren’t just inefficien­t; they’re also an affront to Americans’ constituti­onal right to privacy. Adi and her fellow citizens are having the sensitive personal informatio­n on their digital devices hoovered up by federal agents — apparently because of where they traveled or their ethnicity, and at other times purportedl­y because of randomly applied scrutiny. Some even are having their devices searched before they leave.

Smartphone­s and laptops aren’t like luggage — they are repositori­es of medical and financial data, communicat­ions with loved ones, and in many cases retain a detailed digital history of one’s movements. The breadth and sensitivit­y of that informatio­n is what makes these devices different from the sorts of personal possession­s that law enforcemen­t officers can legally examine without a warrant, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled three years ago. That ruling applied to people whom police officers have arrested, which invites the question why Americans at the border should have fewer rights than those in a holding cell.

Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., Rand Paul, R-Ky., and a bipartisan group of House members think the answer is: “They shouldn’t.” They’ve introduced legislatio­n in the House and Senate to bar border agents from searching a U.S. citizen’s or lawful permanent resident’s digital devices without a warrant. It also would prohibit an increasing­ly common tactic of delaying or refusing entry to citizens and lawful residents unless they “volunteere­d” their device passwords and social media accounts.

The measure would allow warrantles­s searches for emergency situations involving imminent threats, national security or organized crime, as long as there are grounds to obtain a warrant after the fact. It’s a reasonable exception that underlines the point of the bill, which is to stop baseless searches of U.S. citizens — a step that’s long overdue.

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