The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Prosecutor­s seek records related to protest

Feds seek 1.3M names of those who visited anti-Trump website.

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WASHINGTON — An internet company is fighting what it says is a “sweeping” request for informatio­n about an antiTrump website that prosecutor­s allege was behind destructiv­e Inaugurati­on Day protests.

The company says the government is seeking informatio­n about 1.3 million visitors to the site, among other informatio­n.

More than 200 people were charged after protesters in Washington broke windows and set fire to a limousine on President Donald Trump’s Inaugurati­on Day on Jan. 20. Prosecutor­s say the website disruptj20. org was used in the “developmen­t, planning, advertisem­ent, and organizati­on of a violent riot,” and they obtained a search warrant in July ordering the company that hosted the website, DreamHost, to turn over informatio­n.

But California-based DreamHost contends the warrant violates the Constituti­on and a federal privacy law. The company said in a blog post Monday that it’s being asked to turn over IP addresses of those who visited the site plus “contact informatio­n, email content and photos of thousands of people.” The company said that “informatio­n could be used to identify any individual­s who used this site to exercise and express political speech protected under the Constituti­on’s First Amendment.”

“That should be enough to set alarm bells off in anyone’s mind,” the post said. Mark Rumold, a senior staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group supporting Dreamhost.com, said such sweeping seizures are usually reserved for investigat­ions of websites devoted to criminal activity like child pornograph­y.

“Here, the concerns are exacerbate­d because we’re dealing with core, protected First Amendment activities,” he said. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia declined to comment beyond what had been filed in court.

A court filing by prosecutor­s says the search warrant was “properly issued.” A Friday hearing in Superior Court in Washington is scheduled.

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