Rome News-Tribune

An email warrant’s borders

- From the Los Angeles Times

In 2012, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. told a university audience that the challenge for the Supreme Court for the next 50 years would be “how we (adapt) old, establishe­d rules to new technology.”

That comment is usually quoted in connection with technologi­cal changes that have required the court to expand protection­s for personal privacy.

For example, in a 2014 opinion by Roberts, the court held that police generally must obtain a warrant before searching the smartphone­s of people they had arrested.

But sometimes a shift in technology can change the legal rules that come into play, working against the legitimate needs of law enforcemen­t.

That’s the case with a dispute the court has agreed to hear involving an attempt by federal prosecutor­s to obtain emails of a suspect in a drug investigat­ion.

Although the government obtained a warrant based on probable cause, and although the alleged criminal activity apparently occurred in the U.S., a federal appeals court held that Microsoft didn’t have to turn over the emails because they happened to be stored at a data center in Ireland.

The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the law under which the warrant was issued — the Stored Communicat­ions Act of 1986 — can’t be enforced outside the United States. “Neither explicitly nor implicitly does the statute envision the applicatio­n of its warrant provisions overseas,” wrote Judge Susan L. Carney.

Carney noted that when Congress passed the law, electronic communicat­ions weren’t ubiquitous or global. But today’s internet effectivel­y eliminates the distance between the computers connected to it, raising the question of whether emails that can be instantly accessed from the United States should really be considered as existing “overseas.”

In a concurring opinion, Judge Gerard E. Lynch acknowledg­ed that employees of a firm such as Microsoft can “provide the relevant materials” to the government “without ever leaving their desks in the United States.”

Lynch suggested that Congress should revise this “badly outdated statute.”

Congress could amend the act to make it clear that companies must comply with warrants such as the one in this case. But the Justice Department believes that the court can spare Congress the trouble by holding that informatio­n obtainable “with the click of a computer mouse” is subject to the law as it exists. We agree.

Sometimes technology companies are right to resist requests for cooperatio­n from law enforcemen­t.

We supported Apple, for example, when it opposed a demand by the Justice Department that it devise technology to help the FBI break into the locked iPhone of one of the San Bernardino shooters. But in this instance, the government’s case is reasonable.

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 ??  ?? Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email romenewstr­ibune@RN-T.com
Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email romenewstr­ibune@RN-T.com

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