Times Colonist

FBI wants Apple to get data from shooter’s iPhones

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WASHINGTON — The FBI asked Apple this week to help extract data from iPhones that belonged to the Saudi aviation student who investigat­ors say fatally shot three sailors at a U.S. naval base in Florida last month.

Investigat­ors have been trying to access the two devices — an iPhone 7 and an iPhone 5 that belonged to Mohammed Alshamrani, a 21-year-old 2nd lieutenant in the Royal Saudi Air Force — but have been unable to access them because the phones are locked and encrypted, according to the letter from the FBI’s general counsel, Dana Boente.

The FBI has received a court authorizat­ion to search the phones and the devices have been sent to the bureau’s lab in Quantico, Virginia, Boente said.

The investigat­ion is considered a “high-priority national security matter,” Boente said in the letter, which was reviewed by the Associated Press. Alshamrani opened fire at the Pensacola naval base on Dec. 6, killing the three sailors and injuring several others before he was shot dead by a sheriff’s deputy.

FBI officials have sought help from other federal agencies and other experts and investigat­ors have been trying to guess the passwords, but those efforts have been unsuccessf­ul, according to the letter.

At least one of the phones was shot by a sheriff’s deputy during the attack, but investigat­ors believe they may still be able to extract data from the device, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion.

Apple said in a statement that it has already provided investigat­ors with all the relevant data held by the company.

Apple, Facebook and other tech companies have periodical­ly tussled with the FBI over the end-to-end encryption they have built into their products to protect customers’ privacy. The tech industry has resisted calls for a “backdoor” that would allow authoritie­s to read encrypted messages.

Apple resisted efforts to gain access to an iPhone belonging to a perpetrato­r of a 2015 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California, which killed 14 people. The company went to court to block an FBI demand for Apple to disable security measures that complicate­d efforts to guess the phone’s passcode. The FBI relented after it found another way of getting into the phone.

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