Law Enforcement Groups File Amicus Brief In Favor Of FBI... But Which Undermines DOJ's Claim That This Is Just About One Phone
from the about-that... dept
The argument is not a surprising one. It's basically "but we really, really, really want to see what's on these phones" combined with "this may inspire others not to obey us."
Amici believe that the position Apple has taken is a dangerous one. First, Apple's refusal to provide assistance has far-reaching public safety ramifications by making it difficult, and in some cases impossible, for law enforcement to fulfill its obligation to investigate crimes, protect the public by bringing criminals to justice, and enforce the law. Second, if Apple were to prevail, the public at large may itself think twice about cooperating with law enforcement when called upon to do so.Of course both of these are hogwash. First of all, Apple has provided a ton of assistance. But providing some assistance doesn't mean it should be compelled to provide all possible assistance. In fact, this claim ignores the very heart of this case, which is just how far must Apple go, and can a company be compelled to go way beyond what any company has been compelled to do in the past. But this filing misleads the court and pretends it's simply about whether or not Apple should provide any assistance. Similarly, the argument that this kind of info is needed to "enforce the law" is similarly ridiculous. As we've noted, law enforcement never gets "all of the information." It never knows what information has been destroyed, or is hidden and not found, or is just in people's brains. The idea that they need every possible scrap of information has simply never been true, and in fact, our Constitution is designed on the principle that, no, law enforcement doesn't always have the right to access any and all information it wants. That's on purpose.
Separately, this amicus brief -- despite officially being in support of the Justice Department and the FBI may serve to undermine their case. After all, a key part of the DOJ's argument is that this case is just about this one phone. However, as we've discussed, tons of law enforcement folks are salivating over using this ruling as a precedent elsewhere. And this brief makes that quite clear, which might help the judge realize that the Justice Department is being misleading in arguing otherwise.
The other amicus brief in support of the DOJ is one filed on behalf of six individuals who are mostly family members of people who were killed in the San Bernardino attack (five of them, with the other person being the husband of a woman who witnessed the attack, but was not shot). This filing was also not unexpected given that, as we reported earlier, the DOJ reached out to a lawyer to file this amicus brief before even asking the judge for the order. For whatever reason, the actual brief does not appear on PACER, just the application for the amicus brief (it says the brief is attached, but as of my writing this, the full brief does not appear in PACER). I can certainly understand why these individuals would want to support the DOJ here (though, as noted in our earlier posts, at least three other family members have supported Apple's position). But I'm not convinced that their views have any legal impact on the case, just an emotional one.
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Filed Under: all writs act, amicus brief, doj, encryption, fbi, law enforcement, san bernardino
Companies: apple
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That is already the case given that officials dont follow the law.
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once gone trust is not earned by empty promises
but, by good deeds
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Their statement worries me...
Let's just look at what they're implying here. Is law enforcement in the US really obligated to bring criminals to justice? I thought they were supposed to investigate and enforce, full stop?
Secondly, as Mike pointed out, I see nothing in Apple's actions that makes it difficult or impossible for law enforcement to investigate anything. They make it more difficult to gain access to potentially correlated information, but there is plenty to investigate that doesn't require that -- and furthermore, the criminals are already dead. A secondary investigation might be a good idea to see if there is someone else pulling the strings, but that, as Mike pointed out, is a completely different kettle of fish.
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Re:
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At least they admit it's an OBLIGATION.
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Substitute "iPhone" with "Device with updatable firmware". the same precedent will work. The specific details wont matter.
"Under the All-writs act, Amazon has been compelled to provide a custom operating system for their Alexa devices"
"Under the All-writs act, Ford has been compelled to provide a custom operating system for their in-vehicle entertainment systems"
"Under the All-writs act, Samsung has been compelled to provide a custom operating system for their smart TV's"
Nothing that's upgradable will be trustable.
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Finds another leyer of encryption...
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Re: Their statement worries me...
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Full Amicus Brief from Families
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Re: Full Amicus Brief from Families
http://www.scribd.com/mobile/doc/302024267/Amicus-briefs-in-Apple-v-FBI-case
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Yes, they are intentionally misinterpreting the law because they're foolish and lazy. There's a hell of a lot of that going around this century.
What are they going to use for information sources once they've soured everyone on them to the point no-one wants to talk to them? What boneheaded, muddled thinking this is. "Fools R us, and proudly so!"
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I think a better word would be emasculation. Cf. Loreena Bobbett.
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Re: Finds another leyer of encryption...
Sadly, that would only protect those who've found a need to bother learning about all this complex computery stuff, leaving the vast majority of mere users wide open for predation by grasping, psychotic authorities. They don't need this power, they shouldn't have it, and they're wrong to even ask for it. They need to re-think their intentional mis-interpretation of the Constitution.
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If the Government gets their way, I say Apple should have a Wide open iPhone, and the Government can use that, but in the setup process, if you want Encryption, to grab a copy out of the U.S. Designed by a company, in Apple's control enough where the U.S. Government can't stop Apple. Have a warning if you're a U.S. Government employee, you can't install it. Everyone else can. Needs to be, fast, simple and easy.
Though I guess the U.S. Government could issue a take down request as a terrorist site.
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Federal Butt Inskies
This about as many phones as law enforcement can get the courts to order apple to unlock and once the code is written the first time, the burden will be much less for the next phone and the next...
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