Think Tank Says DHS Should Stop Laptop Border Searches
from the but-dhs-will-ignore dept
We've definitely been concerned about Homeland Security and the US government's belief that it's okay to search laptops at the border without probable cause. We've discussed over and over again why the argument that it's the same as searching luggage simply doesn't make any sense. There are some key and important differences:- You mostly store everything on your laptop. So, unlike a suitcase that you're bringing with you, it's the opposite. You might specifically choose what to exclude, but you don't really choose what to include.
- The reason you bring the contents on your laptop over the border is because you're bringing your laptop over the border. If you wanted the content of your laptop to go over the border you'd just send it using the internet. There are no "border guards" on the internet itself, so content flows mostly freely across international boundaries. Thus if anyone wants to get certain content into a country via the internet, they're not doing it by entering that country through border control.
Historically, the scope of what was covered by the border search exception was fairly limited, since the exception is confined to the items a traveler carries across the border. As a practical matter, most private documents, letters, photographs, and other personal effects would remain in an individual’s home, safeguarded by full Fourth Amendment protections and the warrant requirement. With today’s technology, however, people can and do travel with vast quantities of private, personal information stored on their laptops and other electronic devices. Unlike at any time in the past, individuals who travel internationally, by virtue of legitimately choosing to carry electronic devices, are unknowingly subjecting volumes of personal information to involuntary and suspicionless search and review by federal law enforcement authorities. This problem is compounded by the fact that many electronic devices are used to carry both personal and business-related information. The continual evolution in how people use electronic devices in their everyday lives creates growing tension between the Fourth Amendment guarantees and what historically has been viewed as a narrow exception to the requirements for probable cause and a warrant.Unfortunately, we've seen such arguments made in court, and very few courts seem sympathetic to this argument. I find the argument compelling, but courts don't seem bothered by the massive stretching of the once-narrow exception thanks to the massive change in technology. In part, I believe, it's because they haven't really taken into account just what a massive conceptual change it is to have all of your personal records stored on your computer. If you don't think of what the technology allows, but just think of it as "a thing" then you can see why a court would be confused. But, that's why we get so concerned about technologically illiterate courts deciding things that pertain to technology.
Of course, it's unlikely that this report will make much of a difference. Homeland Security has made it clear that they are going to search laptops and they're not really much interested in the intention behind the Constitution.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, border, dhs, ice, laptops, privacy, probable cause
Reader Comments
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What?
Are they looking for drugs? Guns? Other misc. contraband? Are they actually turning them on and looking at files? That's WAY too intrusive if that's the case...
Oh wait...I bet they're looking for downloaded music!
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Re: What?
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Re:
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http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110524/00563014409/feds-seize-more-poker-sites.shtml
U.S. laws selectively apply at (or across) the border.
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Where it says in the Constitution "The Right Of The People"
that means you and me Individually, not some Collectivist grouping.
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The author writes "There are no "border guards" on the internet itself, so content flows mostly freely across international boundaries." In fact, DHS (and US customs, before them) have long regarded countering smuggling of data via the Internet as part of the mission. One oft-trotted out story refers to the interception of the Internet transfer of manuals for a Tomahawk missile.
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Laptop Border Searches
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Re: Laptop Border Searches
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Back To Square One
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TrueCrypt
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Political Harrassment
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Re:
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To observe everything though there is the huge issue of physical transfer, and as hard-drives become capable of holding more and more information the threat of using a laptop to transfer sensitive data has become a larger and larger issue. Chinese Intelligence has already been documented doing this in other countries involving corporate espionage.
It is wrong, but it is important to understand exactly why the DHS cares about this if people are going to make a convincing argument as to why it shouldn't happen.
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Re: What?
Interestingly, back when we still had an actual terrorist threat in this country, the only thing our Customs agents wanted to know about your laptop was whether you'd stripped out the hard drive and batteries and hidden a pistol or a few sticks of dynamite in it.
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Umm... professor?
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Re: TrueCrypt
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Re: Re: TrueCrypt
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The Searches are a Pretext
In most cases, the goal appears to use the searches to pursue individuals thought to be dangerous (e.g., suspected terrorists, pedophiles, etc.) and use what they find to deny them entry into the country or arrest them. That's what they did a couple years ago in searching the laptop of someone convicted of possessing child porn. It's no different than the cops asking a suspect's probation officer to perform a search as the whole warrant requirement is not needed. The looser rules (or no rules) at the border are not unique to data. They've been used as pretexts to bust suspects for decades when there wasn't enough probable cause for a warrant. Law enforcement is not going to give up this tool, nor are courts likely to set precedents by denying laptop searches that could affect other searches. Instead, we may want to focus on avoiding abuses. The concept of reasonable suspicion has been tossed around as a potentially lower standard. DHS has already been forced to clarify their processes more in this area. The last thing they need is a case of some rogue employee sending this kind of data over to WikiLeaks. More consistent rules, transparency, and oversight is better for everyone.
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Re:
that means you and me Individually, not some Collectivist grouping."
What? The constitution applies to groups and individuals alike. After all, groups are composed of individuals.
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
(emphasis added).
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Re: Re: Laptop Border Searches
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Re: Re: TrueCrypt
and that's partly why these laws are retarded. Terrorists and those with something to hide will do this. This law only invades the privacy of those with nothing (that the government should be worried about) to hide.
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Re: The Searches are a Pretext
"It's no different than the cops asking a suspect's probation officer to perform a search as the whole warrant requirement is not needed."
This is different. The person on probation has been convicted of a crime. The probation is part of the punishment. A person not found *guilty* of any crime should not be subjected to the same treatment as a convicted criminal.
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Re:
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Abuse of the Constitution
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Re:
"Congratulations on the purchase of your new Raytheon Tomahawk cruise missile. Please read these safety warnings before operating..."
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Wiretapping
This didn't change until almost 40 years late in Katz v. United States, when the Court began to recognize that the 4th Amendment protected "people, not places".
So ... give it some time?
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Re: Abuse of the Constitution
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How to beat the border
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They'll just change their name...........
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