Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Australian officer got records illegally

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CANBERRA, Australia — Australian police revealed on Friday that an officer broke the country’s contentiou­s new metadata laws by illegally accessing a journalist’s phone records to identify an anonymous source.

Australian Federal Police Commission­er Andrew Colvin revealed the first known breach of the laws, which were passed by Parliament in March 2015 despite widespread privacy concerns.

The laws force Australian communicat­ion companies and Internet providers to store customers’ personal metadata, such as phone numbers called and websites accessed, for at least two years as a counterter­rorism measure for the convenienc­e of law enforcemen­t agencies.

A police officer investigat­ing a police leak failed to get a warrant earlier this year before accessing the phone records of a journalist who reported the leak, Colvin said.

The journalist involved was not told of the breach because the investigat­ion was ongoing, Colvin said.

Police destroyed all the evidence gathered as a result of the breach and advised the Commonweal­th Ombudsman, a watchdog that investigat­es complaints from the public of unreasonab­le treatment by government agencies, Colvin said. The ombudsman will launch an investigat­ion of the breach next week.

Colvin said the investigat­or had not been aware that before accessing a journalist’s phone records to identify a source, police must get a federal judge to issue a Journalist Informatio­n Warrant. Such warrants are an added safeguard in the legislatio­n in recognitio­n of journalist­s’ obligation to protect sources.

Colvin would not say whether police would now seek a warrant. But he said Australian Federal Police have never applied for such a warrant since the new laws came into force.

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