Judge Rejects Warrant Seeking To Force Everyone At A Searched Location To Unlock Seized Electronic Devices

from the new-brute-force-method-revealed dept

Late last year, Thomas Fox-Brewster of Forbes uncovered a strange search warrant among a pile of unsealed documents. The warrant -- approved by a magistrate judge -- allowed law enforcement officers to demand that everyone present at the searched location provide their fingerprints to unlock devices seized from the same location.

In support of its request, the government cited cases dating back to 1910, as though they had any relevance to the current situation. The most recent case cited was 30 years old -- still far from easily applicable to today's smartphones, which are basically pocket-sized personal data centers.

The judge granted it, stating that demands for fingerprints, passwords, or anything (like encryption keys) that might give law enforcement access to the devices' content did not implicate the Fourth or Fifth Amendments. While the magistrate was correct that no court has found the application of fingerprints to unlock devices to be a violation of the Fifth Amendment, the other access options (passwords, encryption keys) might pose Fifth Amendment problems down the road.

Riana Pfefferkorn has uncovered a similar warrant request, but this one has been rejected by the magistrate judge. Pretty much across the board, the order is the antithesis of the one revealed last year. The judge finds [PDF] that the broad request to force everyone present at the residence to apply their fingerprints to seized devices to unlock them implicates multiple Constitutional amendments.

The issues presented in this warrant application are at the cross section of protections provided by the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. Essentially, the government seeks an order from this Court that would allow agents executing this warrant to force "persons at the Subject Premises" to apply their thumbprints and fingerprints to any Apple electronic device recovered at the premises. (See Attach. B, tT 12.) The request is neither limited to a particular person nor a particular device. And, as noted below, the request is made without any specific facts as to who is involved in the criminal conduct linked to the subject premises, or specific facts as to what particular Apple-branded encrypted device is being employed (if any).

The judge notes the government is able to detain and search persons located at the premises being searched, but that does not extend to forcing every single person in a residence at the time of a search to comply with attempts to unlock seized devices. Because the warrant affidavit contained no particularity about the devices or who in the household the government suspected of engaging in criminal activity, the court can't find anything that justifies the broad, inclusive language contained in the request.

This Court agrees that the context in which fingerprints are taken, and not the fingerprints themselves, can raise concerns under the Fourth Amendment. In the instant case, the government is seeking the authority to seize any individual at the subject premises and force the application of their fingerprints as directed by government agents. Based on the facts presented in the application, the Court does not believe such Fourth Amendment intrusions are justified based on the facts articulated.

The court has other problems with the affidavit -- beyond the government's unwarranted extension of Fourth/Fifth Amendment jurisprudence to cover any devices/fingerprints encountered at a searched location. Early in the order, it notes the government is deploying boilerplate nearly as outdated as its case citiations.

Despite the apparent seriousness of the offenses involved, the Court notes that some of the "boilerplate" background information included in the warrant is a bit dated, such as its explanation that "[t]he internet allows any computer to connect to another computer [so] [e]lectronic contact can be made to millions of computers around the world;" its explanation that a "Blackberry" is a common "Personal Digital Assistant" and its suggestion that the use of "cloud technology" is the exceptional way of transferring files and that transferring images to a computer by directly connecting a cable to a camera or other recording device is the expected means of data transfer.

The judge notes outdated boilerplate isn't enough to undo probable cause assertions, but it certainly doesn't help -- especially not when the government is requesting this sort of broad permission.

The inclusion of this somewhat dated view of technology certainly does not distract from the application's goal of establishing probable cause. However, the dated "boilerplate language" is problematic for what is not included. There is absolutely no discussion of wireless internet service and the possibilities and capabilities that wireless service presents in this context. For example, an unsophisticated intemet user, or a careless one, may fail to properly encrypt his wireless service or may share the password injudiciously. Such practices leave open the possibility that it is not an inhabitant of the subject premises that has used the internet to gather and distribute child pornography, but rather it is a person who has access to the internet service at the subject premises.

Obviously, this possibility holds true in all investigations that track the investigation outlined in the instant application. The limitations of this investigation are not fatal to establishing probable cause, but, in the Court's view, these limitations do impact the ability of the government to seek the extraordinary authority related to compelling individuals to provide their fingerprints to unlock an Apple electronic device.

Then there's the other assertions. The government's application does nothing to narrow down which resident it's seeking or what device(s) might contain evidence of criminal activity. What it does appear to be certain about -- for reasons not included in the application -- is that the devices it seeks are Apple products. A footnote in the order questions this assertion.

Why Apple devices are likely to be found at the premises is not explained. The Court is aware that Apple has a large market share in online hardware, but Microsoft's Windows operating systems continue to dominate the overall market share of operating systems used.

What makes these broad, unsupported assertions even worse, especially when combined with the outdated boilerplate, is that this is apparently the direction the government is heading with its search warrants.

In closing, upon presentation of the warrant application to this Court, the government identified for this Court that the warrant application was seeking the forced fingerprinting discussed herein. The government further noted "[t]his is the language that we are making standard in all of our search warrants." This declaration of standardization is perhaps the crux of the problem. As the Court hopes it is plain from the above, the issues presented here require a fact-intensive inquiry both for purposes of the Fourth Amendment and the Fifth Amendment.

More particularity, better probable cause, and fewer assumptions about the Fourth and Fifth Amendment's application in a post-Riley world are what's needed from the government, according to this order. Even though this application was rejected, it's safe to say this same approach has worked elsewhere. We've seen one approved warrant already and there are likely several more safely hidden from the public eye in the government's multitudinous sealed cases.

What's troubling about the government's assertions in this application is its apparent belief it's found an encryption workaround: one that blows past Fourth and Fifth Amendment concerns using little more than boilerplate that still considers cables to be an essential part of "cloud computing," and magistrate judges willing to buy its outdated legal arguments.

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Filed Under: 4th amendment, 5th amendment, fingerprints, location, search, warrant


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  1. identicon
    David, 24 Feb 2017 @ 12:56pm

    Why do people use this feature?

    Even though I can, I simple do not think it's secure enough for a variety of reasons, and something like this just makes the decision even more relevant.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. icon
    TKnarr (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 12:57pm

    Things like this are why I consider writing a lock-screen application that uses fingerprints or other biometrics to confirm a user's identity followed by a user-specific passcode to authenticate the user and permit access, and implements a system where if a passcode fails to validate more than a few times (or if a "drop dead" passcode is entered) it immediately invalidates all normal passcodes and requires a separate much longer password (presumably written down and kept elsewhere) to restore access to the device.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. icon
    TechDescartes (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:10pm

    All in a Name

    They don't call him Magistrate Judge Weisman for nothing.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. icon
    Uriel-238 (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:21pm

    With judges like these...

    a nation of laws will be forever impossible.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:33pm

    Re:

    That might work against police. But DHS has been known to use two-factor authentication (search warrant and lead pipe).

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    DC Pathogen, 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:40pm

    Fingerprint?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. identicon
    DC Pathogen, 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:42pm

    Fingerprint?

    I set up my fingerprint to be read at an odd angle, after so many failed attempts, the phone asks for a passcode.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Feb 2017 @ 1:47pm

    Re: Fingerprint?

    Under all that pressure I would probably forget which finger I used and accidentally passcode-lock my phone due to too many failed attempts. Then I'd be too stressed out to recall my passcode. Sorry, officer :( My bad.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Feb 2017 @ 2:15pm

    If it an Android, you can remotely wipe it. If you have connected your device to your Google, you can go to Google's site and then remotely wipe your phone.

    That is what I will do if my phone is ever seized. I will get to the Internet ASAP, and then tell Google to remotely wipe my phone, and that will be the end of it.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Feb 2017 @ 2:58pm

    Re:

    How are you supposed to get to the Internet while they have your phone and you are detained in a holding area?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Feb 2017 @ 3:02pm

    Re:

    Also, if they've got you caught up in some area wide warrant, and they find out you wiped your phone, I can't imagine they wouldn't throw destruction of evidence charges at you.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. icon
    Roger Strong (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 3:20pm

    Re:

    Ah. Now I understand why my phone can be put into airplane mode - unable to receive ANY signals - from the lock screen without unlocking it.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. icon
    TechDescartes (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 5:32pm

    Re: With judges like these...

    With judges like these...a nation of laws will be forever impossible.

    In this case, the judge is making the DOJ follow the law, rather than letting the DOJ make it up what it wished the law to be.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. icon
    Rapnel (profile), 24 Feb 2017 @ 7:12pm

    Re:

    That is not a good plan... but I can appreciate that you have at least the one.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 26 Feb 2017 @ 2:55am

    Re: Re:

    It would be nice to have a specific passcode i could enter on the lock screen that started a irreversable wipe of my phone. If I was ever detained I could give them that code to unlock it... I would have to risk having destruction of evidence thrown at me, better that the let them have all my data.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. identicon
    Citizens seeking to undermine the US Constitution , 26 Feb 2017 @ 3:08am

    Citizens seeking to undermine the US Constitution are guilty of Treason

    Citizens seeking to undermine the US Constitution are guilty of Treason.

    That's the only death sentence crime defined in the US Constitution.

    So the next time some statist would be dictator makes war on the US Constitution, recognize them for what they are.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. icon
    R.H. (profile), 26 Feb 2017 @ 8:37am

    Re: Re: Re:

    This is what (Tasker)[tasker.dinglisch.net] is for. You need root to make it control anything like phone unlock but, it'd be quite useful. Although, in your case, I'd just use a multi-finger unlock which, if entered incorrectly, rebooted the phone. Android devices (and iOS devices too I think) require the actual password on reboot to unlock the encryption. Since that's something you know, they can't easily make you give that up.

    The emergency wipe the phone needs to be another specific multi-finger setup.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  18. icon
    R.H. (profile), 26 Feb 2017 @ 8:39am

    Re: Re: Re: Re:

    Sigh I clicked submit instead of preview. I always reverse the parentheses and brackets for links in markdown....

    link to this | view in thread ]

  19. icon
    TKnarr (profile), 26 Feb 2017 @ 9:14pm

    Re: Citizens seeking to undermine the US Constitution are guilty of Treason

    They aren't guilty of treason. The definition in the Constitution lists only two acts which constitute treason: levying war on the United States, or giving aid and comfort to the US's enemies. Undermining the Constitution doesn't fall under either heading.

    link to this | view in thread ]


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