New York Post

Vance mad as cell

Blasts encrypted phones

- By MICHAEL GARTLAND mgartland@ nypost. com

Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr. sounded a battle cry Sunday, calling on lawenforce­ment agencies to battle Apple and Google over software that makes it impossible for authoritie­s to “decrypt” cellphones seized in criminal investigat­ions.

The recently rolledout “upgrades” haven’t attracted much general attention, which means police must start pressing elected officials to roll back the terroristf­riendly software, he said.

“Apple has created a phone that is dark, that cannot be accessed by law enforcemen­t even when a court has authorized us to look at its contents,” Vance warned on “The Cats Roundtable” show on WNYM/ 970 AM.

“That’s going to be the terrorists’ communicat­ion device of choice.”

Google is also introducin­g software for its Android phones that police and prosecutor­s will be unable to trace.

Combined, the tech giants make up about 96 percent of the world cellphone market.

When it was launched Sept. 17, the Apple mobile operating system, iOS 8, drew criticism from several top lawenforce­ment officials, including US Attorney General Eric Holder and NYPD Commission­er Bill Bratton.

“It does a terrible disservice to the public, ultimately, and to law enforcemen­t, initially,” Bratton said at the time.

“For them to consciousl­y, for profit and gain, to thwart those legal constituti­onal efforts, shame on them.”

Apple and Google have defended their products, admitting consumer demand was a key considerat­ion.

With older operating systems, the companies could “unlock” cellphone data at th the request of law enforcemen­t. With the new ones, only the phone owner can.

“For all devices running iOS 8.0 and later versions, Apple will not perform iOS data extraction­s in response to government search warrants because the files to be extracted are protected by an encryption key that is tied to the user’s passcode, which Apple does not possess,” the company states on itsWeb site.

Vance said Apple and Google are playing with people’s safety.

“It’s going to affect our ability to protect New Yorkers,” he told the show’s host, former mayoral candidate John Catsimatid­is.

“It’s also going to have nationalse­curity implicatio­ns because a device that cannot be accessed by judicial warrant can be used by homegrown violent extremists and terrorists to communicat­e with each other.”

Vance urged lawenforce­ment leaders to lobby politician­s.

“We need to get their [ elected officials’] support to hold hearings on this issue,” Vance said.

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