The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Twitter: U.S. backs down on seeking anti-Trump user records

- By Anick Jesdanun

The U.S. government has dropped its request for Twitter to produce records that could identify users behind an account opposed to President Donald Trump, the company said Friday.

As a result, Twitter is withdrawin­g a federal lawsuit that challenged the government’s request. On Thursday, Twitter charged that efforts by the government to “unmask” the people behind the account violated the First Amendment.

“The speed with which the government buckled shows just how blatantly unconstitu­tional its demand was in the first place,” American Civil Liberties Union attorney Esha Bhandari said in a statement. Bhandari represents the unidentifi­ed person or people behind the Twitter account.

The account in question is @ALTuscis, a reference to the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services office. In the two months of its existence, the account has been critical of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies. The account described its users to The Associated Press in February as employees and former employees of the agency.

The account is one of dozens of rogue Twitter accounts that have sprung up since Trump took office, purporting to represent current or former federal employees at various agencies who oppose the administra­tion’s policies. Other such “alternativ­e” — or “alt” — accounts include @AltCDC for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and @ AltUSEPA for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the immigratio­n agency and was named as a defendant in Twitter’s lawsuit, didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

In an interview, Bhandari said the rights of anonymous speakers were at risk if the government could demand informatio­n on their identities without any legal justificat­ion. She noted that the government’s summons to Twitter had boilerplat­e language but lacked a specific reason for wanting to know the identities.

She said she hoped the swift withdrawal would deter other federal agencies that might target users of similar “alt” accounts.

“It really shows what a high standard the government has to meet,” she said.

In its lawsuit, Twitter claimed the government cannot compel the company to disclose users’ identities without first meeting several tests. It must prove that a criminal or civil offense has been committed, that it’s not asking for informatio­n with the intent of suppressin­g free speech, and that the interests of the investigat­ion outweigh the First Amendment rights of Twitter and its users, Twitter said.

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