Senator Jeff Sessions Looks To Blast A Giant Hole In The 4th Amendment For ‘Emergency’ Response

Tech Dirt – by Mike Masnick

Yesterday we wrote about an already troubling attempt by Senator John Cornyn to attach adangerous amendment to the Senate’s ECPA reform bill that would massively expand what kinds of electronic communications the FBI has access to (as we noted, the FBI already pretends it has access to this very info, so really this law would be papering over the FBI’s illegal collection of this info). But there’s another amendment, put forth by Senator Jeff Sessions, that is just as, if not more, troubling. It’s basically creating a massive loophole in the 4th Amendment, saying that any and all basic oversight can be tossed out the second the FBI declares the situation to be an “emergency.”  

The amendment would allow the government to bypass the warrant requirement in times of claimed emergency. Specifically, it would mandate that providers turn over sought-after data in response to a claimed emergency from federal, state, or local law enforcement officials. Under current law, companies are permitted, but not required, to comply with such emergency — and warrantless — requests for data.

There are two huge problems with this proposal. First, it appears to be responding to a problem that doesn’t exist. Companies already have discretion to make emergency disclosures to governmental officials, and proponents of the legislation have failed to identify a single instance in which providers failed to disclose sought-after information in response to an actual, life-threatening emergency. To the contrary, the data suggest that providers do in fact regularly cooperate in response to emergency requests. (See the discussion here.)

Second, and of particular concern, the emergency disclosure mandate operates with no judicial backstop. None. Whatsoever. This is in direct contrast with the provisions in both the Wiretap Act and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) that require companies to comply with emergency disclosure orders, but then also require subsequent post-hoc review by a court.

Even a long-term law enforcement guy, James Trainum, is worried about the impact of such a law:

In my 27 year career in law enforcement, the majority of which I spent as a homicide detective with the Metropolitan Police Department of Washington, D.C., I sought and obtained communication records in the majority of my investigations.  I encountered no problems obtaining these records under the current law and in the rare, truly emergency situation, the law posed no undue burden.  I have found that complying with the requirements to obtain records in a non-emergency situation actually helped me build stronger cases because, by following the rules, the evidence was unassailable in court.  Unfortunately, too many of my colleagues, for whatever reason, would try to take the shortcuts that the new law would encourage.

Changing the emergency exception law is unnecessary.  The law permits providers to disclose private communications to the government whenever they have a good-faith belief that such disclosure is required to respond to an emergency.  Furthermore, emergency exceptions are quite uncommon.  For example, in 2014 Google received only 342 emergency requests, compared to 20,280 subpoenas and search warrants, and information was provided in response to the vast majority of those emergency requests.  If a provider finds a problem with the request, law enforcement can always revise it to address concerns.

As we’ve discussed, back in April the House voted unanimously to fix ECPA. And while the Senate has dragged its feet until now, it’s disappointing to see Senators like Sessions and Cornyn now try to attach dangerous amendments to ECPA reform that basically destroy whatever good that is in there. Both of those Senators should be ashamed — and their colleagues should reject these proposals.

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20160607/18190534653/senator-jeff-sessions-looks-to-blast-giant-hole-4th-amendment-emergency-response.shtml

3 thoughts on “Senator Jeff Sessions Looks To Blast A Giant Hole In The 4th Amendment For ‘Emergency’ Response

  1. Let’s see…they vote this in, police letters are drafted in every LEO of the federal government, every Tom, Dick and Harry are named as authorized persons to exercise the right to declare an “emergency”, state’s adopt such laws as the precedent has now been set by the federal, and at every turn a smug little bastard smiles through his reptilian teeth and goes…”but sir/ma’am, it is an emergency. give it over or face jail for obstruction”. Yeeeeah, no way for this to be abused.

  2. There’s an on-going attack on ALL of our Constitutional rights, and this is just part of it.

    They want to whittle them all down to irrelevancy, and then they’ll be forgotten by all but the history books.

    And this process won’t stop without a fight. There it is, so get used to it, and buy more ammo.

  3. “Senator Jeff Sessions Looks To Blast A Giant Hole In The 4th Amendment For ‘Emergency’ Response”

    Someone should be looking blast a giant hole in Sen. Jeff Sessions.

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