ACLU Sues Over Harassment of Immigrant Advocates – The Intercept

Since Donald Trumpsinauguration more than two years ago, Alex Mensing,a volunteerwith the immigrant rights group Pueblo Sin Fronteras, has been pulled into secondary screening nearly 30 times at U.S. ports in the San Diego-Tijuana area, as well as the Los Angeles airport. His longest interrogation, in late 2018, spanned roughly four hours. It was hardly an isolated experience, Mensing told me. Pretty much every member of Pueblo Sin Fronteras who crossed the border was interrogated during that time,he said.

An Intercept investigation in February uncovered the backstory to those interrogations, revealing that Pueblo Sin Fronteras was targeted in a secretive joint U.S.-Mexican intelligence gathering operation, which also swept up immigration attorneys and journalists working along the border. NBC News later obtained documents showing that the operation was carried out by officials within U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the FBI, and included a secret database made up of 59 activists, journalists, attorneys, and unspecified others. At least 10 of the governments targets were volunteers with Pueblo Sin Fronteras. Mensing was one of them.

While CBP eventually admitted to the operations, which sparked multiple internal and congressional investigations, the federal law enforcement agencies involved have emerged from the episode largely unscathed. Mensing is hoping to change that. On Wednesday, he joined two other plaintiffs, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and Kirkland & Ellis, in filing a lawsuit against CBP, ICE, and the FBI for violations of their First and Fourth Amendment rights. Though Mensing and his co-plaintiffs did not commit any crime, violate any customs or border regulation, or engage in any other activity that could reasonably give rise to a suspicion of criminality, the ACLU alleged, they nonetheless faced repeated and prolonged detentions and interrogations at the border.

The governments powers are not limitless, the complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court of Arizona, read. It cannot target people for intrusive surveillance, detention, searches, and interrogation because of their expressive political activity protected under the First Amendment. And it cannot use its border control powers to regulate the import of goods, verify travelers identities, and stop the entry of contraband to conduct suspicionless fishing expeditions for criminal activity unconnected to border enforcement that it could not conduct within the country.

The Trump administrations border enforcement agencies illegally and unconstitutionally exploited their border enforcement authorities, the complaint went on to say, by directing surveillance, detention, intrusive searches accompanied by excessive physical restraint, and intensive interrogation at the border against individuals because of their lawful humanitarian activities.

The ACLUs suit comes one year after thousands of migrants, most from Central America, made their way by caravan to the U.S. border. Some were running from the violence and instability of their home countries, others were fleeing the devastating impacts of the climate crisis on the rural communities they called home.

Families with children traveled together, seeking safety in numbers as they navigated stretches of Mexico where kidnapping, extortion, and murder of migrants are entrenched problems. Though it was not the first, the October 2018 caravan prompted a furious response from Trump, who deployed more than 5,000 troops to the border. Operation Faithful Patriot was initiated just in time for the 2018 midterm elections. Later changed to Operation Secure Line, it was the same campaign under which the surveillance of journalists, lawyers, and advocates was justified. In the months that followed, U.S. border security forces twice launched tear gas into Mexico in response to the caravan, once in November and again on New Years Eve. Both times, women and children were caught up in the gassings.

As The Intercepts and NBCs reporting revealed, the U.S. also ramped up scrutiny of advocates, lawyers, and journalists working in the Tijuana-San Diego area. Mexican law enforcement snapped photos of the passports of photojournalists working near the border wall. When asked who they were taking the images for, the Mexicans replied, For the Americans. The photojournalists were later pulled into secondary screening as they attempted to reenter the U.S. Their images and electronics were searched, and they were pumped for information about the caravan and the activists working with the migrants.

Two award-winning photographers were denied reentry into Mexico, barring them from the place where their journalistic work was focused. Immigration attorneys with the prominent border law firm Al Otro Lado were similarly denied reentry. They filed their own lawsuit, also with the ACLU, challenging the governments actions earlier this year.

By late 2018, interrogations of Pueblo Sin Fronteras volunteers had become the norm. Volunteer Jeff Valenzuela, Mensings co-plaintiff in the ACLU suit, got it particularly bad. A U.S. citizen living in Tijuana with family in California, Valenzuela told his story of border harassment for the first time in an interview with The Intercept earlier this year, explaining how he had been sent to secondary screening a half-dozen times from December through February. In one of the instances, which occurred on Christmas Day as he was attempting to visit his family, border guards searched his phone and he was held for roughly 2 1/2 hours. When Valenzuela attempted to cross the border again days later, he was taken to a concrete cell and shackled to a steel bench for approximately five hours.

For Mensing, the intensification of interrogations became too much. I just got fed up with it. I was tired of getting detained. I was tired of getting interrogated. I was concerned about further retaliation. I was concerned it would escalate, he said. And so, I did not go to the United States from January until September.

The targeting of immigration advocates has extended beyond the San Diego-Tijuana area. In June 2017, roughly 30 Border Patrol agents swept through a humanitarian camp where the faith-based group No More Deaths was providing medical care to a group of migrants who had crossed the desert in southern Arizona. The raid marked the beginning of a sustained crackdown on humanitarian aid providers in the state. In the last two years, the U.S. attorneys office in Arizona has brought nine federal cases against No More Deaths volunteers for leaving jugs of water in the Sonoran Desert, where thousands of migrants have died. In the most serious case to stem from the crackdown, Trump administration prosecutors charged Scott Warren, a geographer from the unincorporated border community of Ajo, with harboring and conspiracy for providing two undocumented migrants with food, water, and beds to sleep in over three days last year. His case ended in a hung jury over the summer. His retrial is scheduled for mid-November. Warren still faces up to 10 years in prison.

Ana Adlerstein, the third plaintiff in the ACLU suit, felt the weight of the Arizona crackdown firsthand when she accompanied an asylum-seeker to the Lukeville port of entry earlier this year. Adlerstein was taken into custody during the episode and, according to the complaint and an interview she gave to The Intercept at the time, told that the Fourth Amendment doesnt apply here. Though she was released after several hours, Adlerstein said U.S. officials accused her of violating the same smuggling statutes that Warren was charged under. Months later, Amnesty International released a report documenting how the threat of smuggling charges has appeared again and again in dozens of cases related to the Trump administrations targeting of aid providers on the border. By discriminatorily targeting human rights defenders most of them US citizens based solely on their political or other opinions, speech and activities, the Trump administration has violated international law, the US Constitution, US laws, and corresponding DHS policies that acknowledge those legally binding civil liberties protections, the July report said.

Last month, Mensing crossed the border into the U.S. for the first time in more than half a year. I got sent to secondary, he said. And I have been sent to secondary every single time I have crossed the border since. The constant pressure from the state has taken its toll, Mensing explained, not just personally, but also on efforts to advocate for some of the worlds most vulnerable populations. If it hadnt been for criminalization by both the U.S. government and the Mexican government, Mensing said, he probably would have spent the spring accompanying caravans north, as he has for the last two years. Its completely changed the way that the organization operates. It completely changes the way that Ive engaged, Mensing explained. Theres a lot of stuff that Pueblo Sin Fronteras and I could have done in the last year to support migrants, to support migrant leadership, to support migrant safety, that we werent able to do because of this process of criminalization.

For Mensing, the targeting he and other advocates have experienced is one thread in a larger story of efforts aimed at deterring migrants displaced from their homes from coming to the U.S. On Saturday, a caravan of more than 1,000 migrants from several African, Caribbean, and Central American nations set off at daybreak from Tapachula, a city in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas, headed north. They were less than a mile into the journey when Mexican security and immigration enforcement forces swarmed, stopping the caravan in its tracks. Three days later, Mensing was still dealing with the fallout, providing consultation to a Honduran national, and fellow migrant rights advocate, swept up in the crackdown.

This kind of stuff is happening every day,he told me. The constitutional violations that we are suing about are an infinitesimal tip of the iceberg of what the U.S. government is doing to crack down on migrant rights groups.

Read the original here:

ACLU Sues Over Harassment of Immigrant Advocates - The Intercept

Sobriety Checkpoint Will Be Held In Cuyahoga County – Patch.com

BROOK PARK, OH A sobriety checkpoint will be held somewhere in Cuyahoga County this weekend, the Ohio State Highway Patrol announced. Details on the checkpoint will be announced later in the week.

The Highway Patrol said sobriety checkpoints are designed to both intercept drunken drivers and deter impaired drivers from ever taking the road. Local law enforcement will assist in conducting the checkpoint.

Residents are asked to designate a sober driver or make other travel arrangements if they plan on drinking, the Highway Patrol said. "Don't let another life be lost for the senseless and selfish act of getting behind the wheel impaired," the Patrol said.

Police departments in Ohio are required by law to announce sobriety checkpoints and their locations prior to the operation. If law enforcement did not announce the checkpoints, residents could argue their Fourth Amendment rights had been violated.

Sobriety checkpoints are meant to serve as a deterrent to drunken driving as much as a means of catching impaired drivers. Announcing checkpoints allows police to send a strong message don't drink and drive, we'll be out there looking for you.

Read this article:

Sobriety Checkpoint Will Be Held In Cuyahoga County - Patch.com

FPC Demands Police Training in the Wake of Another Unjustifiable Kill – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

FPC Demands Police Training in the Wake of Another Unjustifiable Kill

U.S.A. -(Ammoland.com)- Firearms Policy Coalition has issued the following statement in the wake of another killing of an armed and innocent person by police:

On October 12, in Fort Worth, Texas, Atatiana Koquice Jeffersons neighbor called the police because he saw the door of her home left ajar. A Fort Worth police officer took the call. About 2:20 a.m., without announcing his presence, he began moving around outside Ms. Jeffersons home, checking windows and making noise. Hearing alarming sounds from outside her home, Ms. Jefferson did what many responsible Americans would do: she went to investigate the sounds, prepared for the worst. Seconds later, she was shot and killed by the officer.

The tragic and unjustifiable killing of Ms. Jefferson underscores why law enforcement must be better trained to safely encounter people with guns and other constitutionally protected weapons. Especially with the ever-increasing number of individuals who keep and carry firearms for self-defense, the default assumption of law enforcement officers must be that someone armed is not a violent threat until that person proves otherwise. Assuming that every armed person poses a threat puts lives at risk and unnecessarily expands the class divide between government actors and the People they serve.

The Second Amendment codified the pre-existing right of self-defense, which includes the right to keep and bear instruments of force to repel unjust or unlawful force against them. Millions of people exercise this right every day by keeping and carrying guns for self-defense.

Effective self-defense sometimes requires responding, armed with a gun, to an alarming noise at ones home. In fact, the U.S. Supreme Court declared in its landmark D.C. v. Heller (2008) decision that the Second Amendment surely elevates above all other interests the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home. Thus, law enforcement officers cannot use deadly force where it would otherwise be unjustified merely because the homeowner is believed to own a firearm.

Law enforcement agencies and officers must embrace the reality that the mere presence of a firearm does not, and cannot, make its possessor a target for deadly pre-emptive force. In its recent Hicks v. Commonwealth (2019) decision, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court adopted the arguments presented in our coalition brief supporting Mr. Hicks, explaining: We find no justification for the notion that a police officer may infer criminal activity merely from an individuals possession of a concealed firearm in public. . . . Unless a police officer has prior knowledge that a specific individual is not permitted to carry a concealed firearm, and absent articulable facts supporting reasonable suspicion that a firearm is being used or intended to be used in a criminal manner, there simply is no justification for the conclusion that the mere possession of a firearm, where it lawfully may be carried, is alone suggestive of criminal activity.

Mr. Hicks was seized in public. Ms. Jefferson, by contrast, was in her home. And the U.S. Supreme Court said in Heller that the need for defense of self, family, and property is most acute at ones home. Ms. Jefferson was therefore exercising a core Second Amendment right by responding to an alarming noise outside her home by retrieving her firearm to protect herself and her loved ones.

Law enforcement policies and practices that ignore or discount the right to be armed (such as by perceiving all people with guns as threats to pre-emptively shoot or kill), the militarization of our police forces, the absurdly expansive and dangerous qualified immunity doctrine, the senselessly frequent hostile police encounters, and casual use of deadly force are all incredibly concerning and demand serious reform.

FPC demands that federal, state, and local law enforcement throughout the United States immediately engage in substantive training programs that acknowledge the Second and Fourth Amendment rights of armed people, and adequately address the growing number of unjustifiable and tragic killings of armed and innocent people. FPC looks forward to supporting and promoting legal and policy reforms that put human rights and liberty first.

About Firearms Policy Coalition

Firearms Policy Coalition (www.firearmspolicy.org) is a 501(c)4 grassroots nonprofit organization. FPCs mission is to defend the Peoples rightsespecially the fundamental, individual Second Amendment right to keep and bear armsadvance individual liberty, and restore freedom.

Continued here:

FPC Demands Police Training in the Wake of Another Unjustifiable Kill - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

President Trump Is Violating More Than The Emoluments Clause With His Doral Summit – Above the Law

Trump Doral (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Yes, Donald Trumps decision to award himself the G-7 Summit at his Doral Resort is a violation of the Foreign Emoluments Clause of the Constitution. And its probably a violation of the Domestic Emoluments Clause. In fact, its probably the most obvious violation of those clauses in American history. Its self-dealing; its corrupt; its an impeachable offense on its own. The House Judiciary Committee is going to investigate the self-dealing, because they pretty much have to.

Trump has, of course, violated the Emoluments Clause before. Hes actually facing two lawsuits about that. In fact, the Fourth Circuit just agreed to hold an en banc rehearing of one of the emoluments lawsuits.

Emoluments Clause is probably enough law for the political press to handle for one scandal. But, just among us chickens, can we also talk about how the Trump administration is potentially violating laws regarding the assignment of government contracts? Like, ALL of them?

This isnt Nam, there are rules. Hosting the G-7 is, at base, the awarding of a government contract. We have multiple, overlapping statutes regarding that process. There are procedures. There are forms. Those forms require signatures. Getting a government contract is a big part of our economy. Since our economy is based on competition, as opposed to central planning, its simply NOT A THING for the President of the United States to just pick winners of that economy, before we even get to the part where picking himself the winner is a violation of the Constitution.

Im no expert on the laws regarding government contracts, because government compliance lawyer has never been my calling. But, unlike anybody at the White House apparently, I can Google. Heres the header from the Legal Information Institute which is just Wikipedia for people who dont want to pay Westlaw:

The United States Government is the single largest procurer of goods and services in the world, and the Department of Defense (DOD) accounts for the lions share of federal acquisitions. Three major characteristics distinguish Government acquisitions from private sector contracts. First, Government contracts are subject to myriad statutes, regulations, and policies which encourage competition to the maximum extent practicable, ensure proper spending of taxpayer money, and advance socioeconomic goals. Second, Government contracts contain mandatory clauses which afford the Government special contractual rights, including the right to unilaterally change contract terms and conditions or terminate the contract. The most important clauses are the Changes clause, the Termination for Convenience clause, and the Default clause. Third, due to the Governments special status as a sovereign entity, claims and litigation follow the unique procedures of the Contract Disputes Act.

Government contracts are subject to several statutes, including the Competition in Contracting Act and the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act. In addition to statutes, there are a multitude of regulations which govern acquisitions by executive branch agencies. Foremost among these is the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), which is codified in Parts 1 through 53 of Title 48, Chapter 1 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Executive branch agencies may issue their own regulatory supplements to the FAR, such as the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS). The FAR is amended pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, with proposed changes issued jointly by the DOD, the General Services Administration (GSA), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), in coordination with the FAR Council.

The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) is a dense section of law, codified in Title 48 of the U.S. Code. The prohibition against self-dealing in this space is not one of those ephemeral norms that Trump disregards all the time. The self-dealing prohibition is codified right in the statute:

48 CFR 3.601 Policy.

(a) Except as specified in 3.602, a contracting officer shall not knowingly award a contract to a Government employee or to a business concern or other organization owned or substantially owned or controlled by one or more Government employees. This policy is intended to avoid any conflict of interest that might arise between the employees interests and their Government duties, and to avoid the appearance of favoritism or preferential treatment by the Government toward its employees.

(b) For purposes of this subpart, special Government employees (as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202) performing services as experts, advisors, or consultants, or as members of advisory committees, are not considered Government employees unless

(1) The contract arises directly out of the individuals activity as a special Government employee;

(2) In the individuals capacity as a special Government employee, the individual is in a position to influence the award of the contract; or

(3) Another conflict of interest is determined to exist.

Again, the law is complicated and full of exceptions and Im no compliance wonk. But the point is that this law EXISTS. So do others. The Trump administration needs to show that it complied with the law, or show that it doesnt need to comply with the law because it is eligible for some sort of exception. ALL OF THAT MUST BE WRITTEN DOWN. If those arguments dont hold water, Trump is in violation of statute. If those arguments are lies, on official government documents, those lies are crimes.

Making the Emoluments Clause argument against the president for this deal is valid, but its a little bit like pursuing a Fourth Amendment violation against the president for a car-jacking. Sure, it probably is. But, also, THERE ARE LAWS AGAINST CAR-JACKING.

President Trump and his administration, including his administrations lawyers, act like our laws are mere guidelines that dont apply to a strong president. Thats just not true. Awarding yourself a government contract is, at least, a facial violation of law. Does Trump have a defense? Mick Mulvaney suggests that he just wont show us the governments defense to these CHARGES which is also not an acceptable answer.

Trump, obviously, isnt allowed to do this. WHO IS GOING TO TELL HIM?

Elie Mystal is the Executive Editor of Above the Law and a contributor at The Nation. He can be reached @ElieNYC on Twitter, or at elie@abovethelaw.com. He will resist.

Continued here:

President Trump Is Violating More Than The Emoluments Clause With His Doral Summit - Above the Law

The World Watched as an ICE Agent Pushed an Immigration Lawyer to the Ground. Now, Shes Suing the U.S. Government. – ELLE.com

In the second episode of Netflixs Living Undocumented, a six-part documentary series following the lives of several undocumented immigrants in the U.S., lawyer Andrea Martinez is wheeled out of a Kansas City Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility on a stretcher. Her heels are off and her left knee is bloody. Moments earlier, cameras caught an ICE agent shoving her to the ground as she tried to enter the building with her three-year-old client, Noah. He was reuniting with his detained, pregnant mother before they were both deported to Honduras.

In the next scene, Martinez says to the camera, The fact that an ICE agent would assault me in front of cameras and 40 observers, knowing that Im an attorneyimagine, just imagine, how immigrants are treated in private ICE detention facilities.

At the time, Martinez and her colleague, attorney Megan Galicia, were accompanying Noah and his stepfather, Luis Diaz, to the ICE facility. Diaz was hesitant to go inside because he is also an undocumented immigrant, so the lawyers planned for him to hand off Noah in the parking lot. ICE agents previously said Diaz would not be detained, but when he arrived with his stepson, the agents told the lawyers Diaz would need to go inside because of the rain. As Martinez and Galicia asked Diaz if he wanted to enter the facility, an ICE agent approached and threatened to detain him if he didn't go inside. As the lawyers tried to join him, the ICE agent pushed them out of the door and locked it. Martinez fell to the ground, and says she suffered a fractured foot and a concussion.

Inside, Noah and his mother were deported, and Luis was detained anyway. When the agents finally let Martinez inside the facility, the officer tried to get her arrested for forcibly entering without permission. "It was the most strange set of events, because when you're told you have to come into a space and then the ICE agent flips and calls the police and lies, you think, 'What world am I living in?'" she told ELLE.com. "'What is happening?'"

Though a criminal investigation occurred right after, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, Timothy Garrison, decided not to press charges. But this past Thursday, Martinez, represented by the ACLU, filed a civil complaint in the U.S. District Court, Western District of Missouri, suing the U.S. government for excessive force and unlawful search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment, as well as the two ICE agents for assault, battery, false arrest, false imprisonment, and negligent infliction of emotional distress.

ELLE.com spoke with Martinez to discuss her lawsuit, her experience watching the documentary, and how she takes care of herself with such an intense job.

After law school, I spent nine months in Guatemala assisting with a human rights organization called International Justice Mission. I returned to the U.S. and spent a year as a law clerk for a federal judge at the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. During that year, I married my Honduran husband and did his immigration paperwork and realized it is a very complicated field of law. People started asking me questions about immigration law, and I became increasingly interested in the complexities of the field and decided that I was going to dedicate my career to it, in large part because I always wanted to be a human rights lawyer. I believe the rights of immigrants are human rights, and this is the human rights struggle of our day.

It started when my colleague Megan Galicia received an email to a Listserv in April 2018. It was a plea to help a pregnant detained woman. Megan said she sat on it for a couple of days. One night she couldn't sleep because she kept thinking about this Bible verse that says, I was in prison, and you visited me, from Matthew 25. She felt tormented by the thought of what it would be like to be a pregnant woman detained in a place [where] you don't speak the language, you don't know anyone. Megan finally came to me and said, "No other lawyers have agreed to take the case. Do you feel like we should go visit this woman?" And I told her, "Yeah, let's go visit her."

Courtesy of Netflix

Megan and I visited Kenia. It was really disturbing to see a pregnant immigrant woman with no criminal history being detained in a county jail with people who had committed crimes. We started reaching out to local press to talk about how disturbing this new ICE policy was. This was a fairly new policy at that time, that ICE would detain pregnant women; they used to not, in our experience. The Kansas City Star wrote up a newspaper article about her being detained, and little did we know, Netflix was scouring the internet, looking for stories of immigrants that they could feature in a new documentary. I got a call from some film producers and they said, "Hey, we'd like to follow Kenia's story. Can we come film them?" We asked Kenia and Luis if that was something they would be open to. They both said yes. And wow, did [Netflix] show up.

I don't think it's happened to any immigration attorney before. It sent shockwaves throughout the lawyer world because, of course, we expect to be able to do our jobs without getting assaulted or physically injured. Thats one of the reasons why this lawsuit is so important. Lawyers simply cannot be assaulted when doing their jobs or tricked the way that we were. These ICE agents have no excuse for behaving the way they did. There were cameras, there were observers, but they were peaceful and they were in a public space. My advice is that whenever ICE is around, people need to take out their phones and start recording what's happening.

I've been going to therapy for about a year now, since the ICE assault happened, and I immediately was like, I think I need to go to more therapy. It's really hard. It was very distressing to be locked in a room with an armed ICE agent who had just assaulted me and who was refusing me medical treatment and was trying to take my phone and not letting me call the police.

Courtesy of Andrea Martinez

It's a disgrace to the United States how these immigrants are treated. The problem is that many immigrants who are abused and mistreated by ICE are eventually deported, or [are] so voiceless that they don't sue or can't sue. That's why this lawsuit is so important. This case was about me, but it represents a lot more. It represents, in my opinion, all the immigrants who have suffered abuse and mistreatment by officials at the Department of Homeland Security and have never gotten justice for the suffering that they've endured.

Im a huge proponent of self care and taking the time you need to take care of yourself first. If we're going to help other people, we have to make sure we're strong and we're healthy as advocates. For me, that means I really prioritize my faith. Also, the other immigration lawyers throughout the United States, they're such an encouragement. We don't act like competitors. We're just all sort of surviving, and there's something that's really beautiful about that. It's a community.

Visit link:

The World Watched as an ICE Agent Pushed an Immigration Lawyer to the Ground. Now, Shes Suing the U.S. Government. - ELLE.com

Secret Court Rules That the FBI’s Backdoor Searches of Americans Violated the Fourth Amendment – EFF

But the Court Misses the Larger Problem: Section 702s Mass Surveillance is Inherently Unconstitutional

EFF has long maintained that it is impossible to conduct mass surveillance and still protect the privacy and constitutional rights of innocent Americans, much less the human rights of innocent people around the world.

This week, we were once again proven right. We learned new and disturbing information about the FBIs repeated and unjustified searches of Americans information contained in massive databases of communications collected using the governments Section 702 mass surveillance program.

A series of newly unsealed rulings from the federal district and appellate courts tasked with overseeing foreign surveillance show that the FBI has been unable to comply with even modest oversight rules Congress placed on backdoor searches of Americans by the FBI. Instead, the Bureau routinely abuses its ability to search through this NSA-collected information for purposes unrelated to Section 702s intended national security purposes.

The size of the problem is staggering. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) held that the FBI has conducted tens of thousands of unjustified queries of Section 702 data. The FISC found that the FBI created an unduly lax environment in which maximal use of these invasive searches was a routine and encouraged practice.

The court should have imposed a real constitutional solution: it should require the FBI to get a warrant before searching for peoples communications

But as is too often the case, the secret surveillance courts let the government off easy. Although the FISC initially ruled the FBIs backdoor search procedures violated the Fourth Amendment in practice, the ultimate impact of the ruling was quite limited. After the government appealed, the FISC allowed the FBI to continue to use backdoor searches to invade peoples privacyeven in investigations that may have nothing to do with national security or foreign intelligenceso long as it follows what the appeals court called a modest ministerial procedure. Basically, this means requiring FBI agents to document more clearly why they were searching the giant 702 databases for information about Americans.

Rather than simply requiring a bit more documentation, we believe the court should have imposed a real constitutional solution: it should require the FBI to get a warrant before searching for peoples communications.

Ultimately, these orders follow a predictable path. First, they demonstrate horrific and systemic constitutional abuses. Then, they respond with small administrative adjustments. They highlight how judges sitting on the secret surveillance courts seem to have forgotten their primary role of protecting innocent Americans from unconstitutional government actions. Instead, they become lost in a thicket of administrative procedures that are aimed at providing thin veil of privacy protection while allowing the real violations to continue.

Even when these judges are alerted to actual violations of the law, which have been occurring for more than a decade, they retreat from what should now be clear as day: Section 702 is itself unconstitutional. The law allows the government to sweep up peoples communications and records of communications and amass them in a database for later warrantless searching by the FBI. This can be done for reasons unrelated to national security, much less supported by probable cause.

No amount of ministerial adjustments can cure Section 702s Fourth Amendment problems, which is why EFF has been fighting to halt this mass surveillance for more than a decade.

These rulings arose from a routine operation of Section 702the FISCs annual review of the governments certifications, the high-level descriptions of its plans for conducting 702 surveillance. Unlike traditional FISA surveillance, the FISC does not review individualized, warrant-like applications under Section 702, and instead signs off on programmatic documents like targeting and minimization procedures. Unlike regular warrants, the individuals affected by the searches are never given notice, much less enabled to seek a remedy for misuse. Yet, even under this limited (and we believe insufficient) judicial review, the FISC has repeatedly found deficiencies in the intelligence communitys procedures, and this most recent certification was no different.

Specifically, among the problems the FISC noticed were problems with the FBIs backdoor search procedures. The court noted that in 2018, Congress directed the FBI to record every time it searched a database of communications collected under Section 702 for a term associated with a U.S. person, but that the Bureau was simply keeping a record of every time it ran such a search on all people. In addition, it was not making any record of why it was running these searches, meaning it could search for Americans communications without a lawful national security purpose. The court ordered the government to submit information, and also took the opportunity to appoint amici to counter the otherwise one-sided arguments by the government, a procedure given to the court as part of the 2015 USA Freedom Act (and which EFF had strongly advocated for).

As the FBI provided more information to the secret court, it became apparent just how flagrant the FBIs disregard for the statute was. The court found no justification for FBIs refusal to record queries of Americans identifiers, and that the agency was simply disobeying the will of Congress.

Even more disturbing was the FBIs misuse of backdoor searches, which is when the FBI looks through peoples communications collected under Section 702 without a warrant and often for domestic law enforcement purposes. Since the beginning of Section 702, the FBI has avoided quantifying its use of backdoor searches, but we have known that its queries dwarfed other agencies. In the October 2018 FISC opinion, we get a window into just how disparate the number of FBIs searches is. In 2017, the NSA, CIA and National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) collectively used approximately 7500 terms associated with U.S. persons to query content information acquired under Section 702. Meanwhile, the FBI ran 3.1 million queries against a single database alone. Even the FISC itself did not get a full accounting of the FBIs queries that year, or what percentage involved Americans identifiers, but the court noted that given the FBI's domestic focus it seems likely that a significant percentage of its queries involve U.S.-person query terms.

The court went on to explain that the laxand sometimes nonexistentoversight of these backdoor searches generated significant misuse. Examples reported by the government included tens of thousands of batch queries in which the FBI searched identifiers en masse on the basis that one of them would return foreign intelligence information. The court described a hypothetical involving suspicion that an employee of a government contractor was selling information about classified technology, in which the FBI would search identifiers belonging to all 100 of the contractors employees.

As the court observed, these compliance issues demonstrated fundamental misunderstandings about the statutory and administrative limits on use of Section 702 information, which is supposed to be reasonably likely to return foreign intelligence information. Worse, because the FBI did not document its agents justifications for running these queries, it appears entirely possible that further querying violations involving large numbers of U S.-person query terms have escaped the attention of overseers and have not been reported to the Court.

With the benefit of input from its appointed amici, the FISC initially saw these violations for what they were: a massive violation of Americans Fourth Amendment rights. Unfortunately, the court let the FBI off with a relatively minor modification of its backdoor search query procedures, and made no provision for those impacted by these violations to ever be formally notified, so that they could seek their own remedies. Instead, going forward, FBI personnel must document when they use U.S. person identifiers to run backdoor searchesas required by Congressand they must describe why these queries are likely to return foreign intelligence. Thats it.

Even as to this requirement which was already what the law required -- there are several exceptions and loopholes. This means that at least in some cases, the FBI can still trawl through massive databases of warrantlessly collected communications using Americans names, phone numbers, social security numbers and other information and then use the contents of the communications for investigations that have nothing to do with national security.

It is disturbing that in response to widespread unconstitutional abuses by the FBI, the courts charged with protecting peoples privacy and overseeing the governments surveillance programs required FBI officials to just do more paperwork. The fact that such a remedy was seen as appropriate underscores how abstract ordinary peoples privacyand the Fourth Amendments protectionshave become for both FISC judges and the appeals judges above them on the Foreign Intelligence Court of Review (FISCR).

But the fact that judges view protecting peoples privacy rights through the abstract lens of procedures is also the fault of Congress and the executive branch, who continue to push the fiction that mass surveillance programs operating Section 702 can be squared with the Fourth Amendment. They cannot be.

First, Section 702 allows widespread collection (seizure) of peoples Internet activities and communications without a warrant, and the subsequent use of that information (search) for general criminal purposes as well as national security purposes. Such untargeted surveillance and accompanying privacy invasions are anathema to our constitutional right to privacy and resembles a secret general warrant to search anyone, at any time.

The Founders did not fight a revolution to gain the right to government agency protocols

Second, rather than judges deciding in specific cases whether the government has probable cause to justify its surveillance of particular people or groups, the FISCs role under Section 702 is relegated to approving general procedures that the government says are designed to protect peoples privacy overall. Instead of serving as a neutral magistrate that protects individual privacy, the court is several steps removed from the actual people caught up in the governments mass surveillance. This allows judges to then decide peoples rights in the abstract and without ever having to notify the people involved, much less provide them with a remedy for violations. This likely leads the FISC to be more likely to view procedures and paperwork as sufficient to safeguard peoples Fourth Amendment rights. Its also why individual civil cases like our Jewel v. NSA case are so necessary.

As the Supreme Court stated in Riley v. California, the Founders did not fight a revolution to gain the right to government agency protocols. Yet such abstract agency protocols are precisely what the FISC endorses and applies here with regard to your constitutionally protected communications.

Third, because Section 702 allows the government to amass vast stores of peoples communications and explicitly authorizes the FBI to search it, it encourages the very privacy abuses the FISCs 2018 opinion details. These Fourth Amendment violations are significant and problematic. But because the FISC is so far removed from overseeing the FBIs access to the data, it does not consider the most basic protections required by the Constitution: requiring agents to get a warrant.

We hope that these latest revelations are a wake-up call for Congress to act and repeal Section 702 or, at minimum, to require the FBI to get individual warrants, approved by a court, before beginning their backdoor searches. And while we believe current law allows our civil litigation, Congress can also remove government roadblocks by providing clear, unequivocal notice, as well as an individual remedy for those injured by any FBI or NSA or CIA violations of this right. We also hope that the FISC itself will object to merely being an administrative oversight body, and instead push for more stringent protections for peoples privacy, and pay more attention to the inherent constitutional problems of Section 702.

But no matter what, EFF will continue to push its legal challenges to the governments mass surveillance program and will work to bring an end to unconstitutional mass surveillance.

See the rest here:

Secret Court Rules That the FBI's Backdoor Searches of Americans Violated the Fourth Amendment - EFF

ACLU Sues Worthington For Arrest That Left Man With Nearly $150K In Medical Bills – WCCO | CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) A lawsuit against a southern Minnesota city and its police department alleges that excessive force was used in an arrest earlier this year, leaving a man with several broken bones and nearly $150,000 in medical bills.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed the lawsuit Monday against the city of Worthington and its police department. The suit names the police chief, Troy Appel, officer Mark Riley, and Rileys friend, Evan Eggers, who was on a ride-along at the time of the arrest.

The victim is identified as Kelvin Francisco Rodriquez, an Iowa man who works in Worthington.

During the arrest on Jan. 12, he suffered four broken ribs and internal bleeding due to lacerations to his pancreas and liver, according to the ALCU. The lawsuit alleges that he told officers multiple times that he needed to go to a hospital but they refused to take him to one for several hours.

By the time Rodriquez got medical attention, he had to be airlifted to a hospital in South Dakota, where he was hospitalized for five days, incurring close to $150,000 in medical bills.

The lawsuit alleges that Rodriquezs Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the use of excessive force and his Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated by the delay in medical treatment.

Dashcam Video Of Kelvin Rodriquezs Arrest

In a statement released by the ACLU, Rodriquez says hes speaking about what happened to him because its happening to other people in the Worthington.

As a human being, I ask that the police be held accountable for not adequately doing their job and respecting me as a human being, he said. My wife and children saw me going in and out of life and death. I think it is fair to ask for justice.

According to the lawsuit, Rodriquezs arrest came after he noticed a squad car trailing him and, out of fear of how police treat minorities in Worthington, tried to avoid them by turning into a parking lot.

The squad car followed Rodriquez into the lot, where he quickly parked his car and started to run. But when the squad cars emergency lights flashed, he stopped and put his hands up. This can be seen in police dashcam video.

Riley ordered Rodriquez to get on the ground and put his hands behind his back. While out of view of the dashcam video, Riley places his knee and full body weight on Rodriquezs ribs, the lawsuit alleges. Rodriquez can be heard on the video moaning in pain.

The lawsuit is seeking damages to be paid to Rodriquez, although no specific dollar amount was listed.

This is the second time that the ACLU has sued Worthington and its police department over what it claimed was the use of excessive force. In 2016, Anthony Promvongsa was pulled over by a drug task force and punched and kneed while he was still seat-belted in his car.

That case ended with a $60,000 settlement for Promvongsa, and the city agreeing to a number of policy changes dealing with use of force.

Among the policy changes was a requirement for Worthington officers to document when they see officers using force. The lawsuit filed on behalf of Rodriquez accuses the police department of not following this and other policies related to use of force.

WCCO reached out to the Worthington Police Department for comment.

See the original post:

ACLU Sues Worthington For Arrest That Left Man With Nearly $150K In Medical Bills - WCCO | CBS Minnesota

Editorial: FBI caught breaking the rules | Editorials – Charleston Post Courier

A federal court rightly rebuked the FBI last year for breaking the law and violating the Fourth Amendment prohibition against unreasonable searches in its use of government records of communications collected without a court warrant.

Making the court finding revealed Tuesday all the more striking was that the violations were carried out under the Trump administration, which has made quite an issue about FBI surveillance of the Trump campaign in 2016. Indeed, FBI Director Christopher Wray argued, unsuccessfully, that complying with the law would put an unacceptable administrative burden on the agency.

The finding breathes life into the contention that there may be a culture within the FBI that verges on contempt for the law. If so, it must be thoroughly stamped out.

The Justice Department appealed the secret ruling of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to a special appeals panel and rightly lost, leading to the publication this week of the heavily censored 2018 court decision.

Although the Justice Department has agreed to abide by the courts order that it keep meticulous records of any request to extract information from a secret database of millions of telephone calls and other communications, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court decision raises serious questions about the agencys ability to monitor abuses.

The communications database is maintained by the National Security Agency, the nations collector of electronic communications for intelligence use. It is authorized by law, but the NSA was ordered in 2017 to purge millions of records collected in violation of the law and was only authorized to resume collection in 2018. The NSA is said to be reconsidering the usefulness of the bulk collection program, which sweeps up communications by foreign intelligence targets including those that might involve U.S. citizens and residents.

The collection process is known as upstream intelligence gathering. The use of the data by the CIA, FBI and other federal intelligence agencies is known as downstream intelligence work. The downstream exploitation of the data is supposed to be governed by the Fourth Amendment and require a court order before communications by U.S. citizens and residents can be queried by intelligence analysts.

The intelligence court found that the FBI was the only downstream data user not in compliance with a new law requiring detailed record-keeping. It cited examples of FBI abuse that included asking for data on all 57,000 FBI employees and contractors and the use of the database by one contractor employee to keep tabs on his relatives.

These examples may only be the tip of an iceberg of unauthorized snooping. The court found that the FBIs system for monitoring potential abuses of the communications database examined only a fraction of the occasions when the database was used by one of its employees or contractors.

Until better controls are put in place, the excessively large number of people and contractors entitled to query the database is bound to make it hard for the FBI to verify that it is complying with the law and the Constitution as directed by the intelligence court.

That should be an issue for Congress as it considers renewing a different surveillance authority known as Section 215 of the Patriot Act that expires at the end of December. It allows the government to obtain a secret court order requiring telephone companies to hand over any records or other tangible thing if deemed relevant to international terrorism or undefined clandestine intelligence activity.

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has raised some serious red flags about the FBIs use and abuse of it surveillance authorities. Its important that the FBI follows the law and the Constitution.

See the article here:

Editorial: FBI caught breaking the rules | Editorials - Charleston Post Courier

The FISA Court’s 702 Opinions, Part I: A History of Non-Compliance Repeats Itself – Just Security

Last week, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released three redacted opinions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (also known as the FISA Court) and the FISA Court of Review (FISCR). In the first opinion, the FISA Court held that the FBIs procedures for accessing Americans communications that are incidentally collected under Section 702 of FISA violated both the statute and the Fourth Amendment. The government appealed, and in the second opinion, the FISCR upheld the FISA Courts decision. The FBI was forced to revise its procedures to conform with the Courts ruling, and in the third opinion, the Court approved the revised procedures.

The government will no doubt try to sell this as an oversight success story. After all, the Department of Justices audits had detected instances of FBI non-compliance with legal requirements, and the Department reported those instances to the FISA Court. The Court solicited the assistance of amici and adopted their position in significant part. It ordered remedies that the FBI is now required to implement. And all of this became public because Congress in 2015 required the disclosure of significant FISA Court opinions. The system worked, right?

I see a very different story. This is now the fourth major FISA Court opinion on Section 702 in 10 years documenting substantial non-compliance with the rules meant to protect Americans privacy. The opinion, moreover, reveals that the FBI is conducting literally millions of backdoor searchesincluding so-called batch queries that rest on the same discredited legal theory used to justify the NSAs bulk collection of Americans phone records. Despite the enormous implications for Americans privacy and the governments dismal record, the remedy suggested by amici and imposed by the Court was just more record-keeping. And the government sat on the opinion for a year, hoping for an appellate victory that would help mitigate the PR damage from disclosure.

Background: Section 702s Troubled History

To put the Courts recent opinions in context, some background is necessary. Under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), passed in 2008, the National Security Agency (NSA), operating inside the United States, is authorized to collect communications of foreigners overseas for foreign intelligence purposes. No warrant is required for this collection because courts have held that foreigners have no Fourth Amendment rights. Instead, each year, the FISA Court must sign off on the procedures that govern the surveillance.

Although ostensibly targeted at foreigners, Section 702 surveillance inevitably sweeps in massive amounts of Americans communications. Recognizing the impact on Americans privacy, Congress required the NSA to minimize the sharing, retention, and use of this incidentally collected U.S. person data. But the government and the FISA Court have embraced an interpretation of minimize that is remarkably maximal. The NSA shares raw data with multiple other agenciesincluding the FBI and the CIAand all of them retain the data for a functional minimum of five years. Moreover, the FBI routinely combs through it looking for Americans communications to use in purely domestic cases, even in situations where the FBI lacks a factual predicate to open a full investigation.

In 2011, the government disclosed to the FISA Court that it had misrepresented the nature of its upstream collection activities under Section 702. (Upstream collection takes place as the communications are transiting over the Internet backbone; downstream collection acquires stored communications, usually from the servers of Internet Service Providers.) When conducting upstream surveillance, the government was acquiring, not just communications to or from the targets of surveillance, but communications that simply mentioned certain information about them (known as abouts collection). As a result, the government was acquiring packets of data containing multiple communications, some of which had nothing to do with the target. This included tens of thousands of wholly domestic communications.

The Court was not pleased to learn about this significant issue three years into the programs operation. It held that the governments handling of the data violated the Fourth Amendment, and it required the government to develop special rulesapproved by the Court in 2012for segregating, storing, retaining, and accessing communications obtained through upstream collection.

In 2015, the Court was under the impression that these rules were being followed. However, in approving Section 702 surveillance that year, it noted several incidents of non-compliance with other rules designed to protect Americans privacyincluding FBI violations of protections for attorney-client communications, a failure of access controls by the FBI, and the NSAs failure to purge certain improperly collected data. Once again, the Court expressed displeasure at being notified of infractions long after they occurred.

In 2016, the FISA Court learned that the NSA had been violating the rules established in 2012. Because those rules were designed to remedy a Fourth Amendment violation occurring since the start of the program, the NSAs non-compliance meant that its upstream collection activities had been operating unconstitutionally for eight years. Moreover, the government did not report this issue for several months after discovering it. Unable to bring itself into compliance, the NSA made the only decision it could: In the spring of 2017, it abandoned abouts collection, which was at the root of the problem.

When Section 702 came up for reauthorization in late 2017, civil liberties advocates pointed to this troubled history. They also pointed to a growing body of case law holding that searches of government databases can, in certain circumstances, constitute a separate Fourth Amendment event. They argued that government agencies should be required to obtain a warrant before searching Section 702-obtained data for the communications of Americans (a practice formally called U.S. person queries and informally dubbed backdoor searches). They also urged Congress to ban abouts collection, lest the government attempt to resume it.

Congress rejected these proposals. Although Congress did require the FBI to obtain the FISA Courts permission to conduct U.S. person queries in a tiny sliver of cases, it blessed the vast majority of these searches, which previously had no foundation in the text of Section 702. It simply required the FBI to develop querying procedures that the FISA Court would have to approve. It also required the FBI to keep records of each U.S. person query it conducted. With respect to abouts collection, Congress required the government to obtain FISA Court approval and to give Congress advance notice before resuming the practice.

The Courts October 2018 Ruling

In March 2018, the government submitted its annual certifications and procedures to the FISA Court for its approval. In a decision dated October 18, 2018, and released last week, the FISA Court held that the FBIs minimization procedures violated both the statute and the Fourth Amendment. The Courts opinion addresses three main practices by the FBI: downstream collection of certain communications; the FBIs failure to record USP queries; and the FBIs improper use of USP queries.

Downstream collection and abouts communications. Although this section of the opinion is highly redacted, it appears that the government is engaged in a new form of downstream collection that raised a flag for the FISA Court. The Court solicited amicis advice about whether the statutory preconditions for resuming abouts collection apply to downstream collection, and whether certain activities in the governments 2018 certifications involve the acquisition of abouts communications. Amici argued that the answer to both questions was yes; the governments answer was no in both cases. The Court split the baby, holding that the statutory requirements apply to any kind of abouts collection, but that no such collection would occur under the governments certifications.

The heavy redactions make it difficult to assess the significance of this part of the opinion. However, on its face, the definition of abouts collectionbasically, anything other than a communication to or from the targetshould not be difficult to apply. It is worrisome that the government and amici reached different conclusions about whether a certain form of collection merited the label abouts. The uncertainty strongly supports a suspicion civil liberties advocates have held for some time: that the selectors the government uses to identify the communications to be collected are not necessarily unique identifiers (such as email addresses), but can sweep in people other than the intended targets (as would, for instance, IP addresses).

The statutory requirement to count U.S. person queries. In its January 2018 reauthorization of Section 702, Congress ordered the government to adopt querying procedures that included a technical procedure whereby a record is kept of each United States person query term used for a query. Instead, in the querying procedures that the FBI submitted to the FISA Court, the Bureau announced that it intends to satisfy the record-keeping requirement by keeping a record of all queriesin other words, the FBI would lump together U.S. person queries and non-U.S. person queries, without distinguishing between them.

The government defended this approach with a weak argument that the statutory text was somehow ambiguous, and that both the legislative history and policy considerations weighed against requiring the FBI to document U.S. person queries. In a refrain often heard when an intelligence or law enforcement agency is asked to devote time or resources to safeguarding civil liberties, the government claimed that requiring the FBI to figure out whether a particular investigative subject was a U.S. person would divert resources from investigative work . . . to the detriment of public safety.

The FISA Court has historically yielded to such pleas, and on this occasion, the Court seemed sympathetic. Ultimately, however, the Court concluded that it had no choice. It stated: Regardless of how persuasive the FBIs considerations may be, the Court is not free to substitute its understanding of sound policyor, for that matter, the understanding of the Director of the FBIfor the clear command of the statute. The law, the Court held, was unambiguous in its directive to count U.S. person queries.

On appeal, the FISCR upheld the Courts ruling on this question. The FISCR, however, seemed somewhat less sympathetic to the governments position. Under the FBIs querying procedures, U.S. person query term is defined as a term that is reasonably likely to identify one or more specific United States persons. This definition does not require a high level of certainty. Moreover, the procedures provide for the application of default assumptions in cases where specific information is lacking. Under these circumstances, it is hard to argue with the FISCRs assessment that counting U.S. person queries is not a burdensome substantive requirement, and that it would simply mean adding one (largely ministerial) item to the checklist that FBI personnel most likely already work through when conducting queries for investigative purposes.

Somewhat oddly, the FISCR did not resolve the other major issue on appeal: whether the FBIs repeated violations of its own querying and minimization procedures rendered those rules unlawful and unconstitutional as implemented. Those violations, and the FISA Courts failure to require an adequate remedy for them, will be the subject of Part II of this post.

Read more here:

The FISA Court's 702 Opinions, Part I: A History of Non-Compliance Repeats Itself - Just Security

Is smell enough to justify search warrant? Bloomfield Township man appealing decision on marijuana case – The Oakland Press

Nearly a year after voters approved adult use of recreational marijuana, Oakland County resident Kevin John Carlson continues to fight a possession/intent to deliver case, which he believes stems from a search warrant that should never have been granted.

Carlson, 30, was charged in early 2018 after police searched his Bloomfield Township home and reportedly found marijuana and other evidence months prior to cannabis being legalized in Michigan. At the time Carlson was a registered marijuana patient and caregiver, legally allowed to have a certain amount of cannabis.

The magistrate who issued the search warrant based on police reportedly smelling marijuana outside the home was wrong to do so because it wasnt based on probable cause, Carlson claimed.

When police executed the search warrant, they reportedly found much more than the allowable amounts 155 pounds of marijuana in packages and jars, scales, $82,000 in cash and other evidence to pin the possession and drug delivery/manufacturing charges on Carlson. Yet Carlsons trial in Oakland County Circuit Court was put on hold last year while he appealed Judge Phyllis McMillens ruling there was no issue with the search warrant, and the evidence that turned up was admissible.

Carlsons claim that the smell alone wasnt sufficient for a search warrant recently got shot down by the Michigan Court of Appeals, who sided with McMillens decision not to quash the evidence.

The opinion, in part, states: the strong odor of marijuana that the officer smelled provided a substantial basis to infer a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime would be found inside the defendants home.

The court further found that the 2008 Michigan Medical Marihuana Act didnt shield Carlson from the search, stating the police were not obligated to determine, before obtaining a search warrant, the legality of the marijuana-related activities inside the defendants home and whether the defendants activities complied with the MMMA.

The opinion was signed by COA Judges Mark J. Cavanaugh, Jane M. Beckering and Michael F. Gadola.

However, Carlsons defense attorney Michael Komorn said the judges failed to address if current Michigan marijuana law can be applied retroactively and are wrong in not considering its relevancy, as well as the state reclassification of medical marijuana as a Schedule II drug permitted for some use. Carlsons case is next headed to the Michigan Supreme Court for consideration, which earlier had remanded it to the Court of Appeals.

This case is important for Fourth Amendment issues (regarding protection against unreasonable search and seizure) for constitutional reasons, Komorn said, and for the citizens of Michigan...just because somebody is doing something suspicious, thats not enough for probable cause.

Komorn also said with police often relying on smell in dealing with citizens and the law regarding marijuana and alcohol, for example how this case ultimately plays out will have pervasive impact.

People have a right to know what to expect...certainly, they should have a definite answer, he said.

It will likely be several months or more before the Supreme Court decides whether or not to take Carlson's case. That keeps it pending in Oakland County Circuit Court.

ALSO SEE:

A Pontiac man is headed to Oakland County Circuit Court on a dozen charges related to the murder of Eugene Bass, 42 of Lansing, whose body has

Authorities are seeking information from the public to help identify a prowler believed to be tied to several incidents in Rochester Hills and

A settlement has been reached between the state and a Walled Lake marijuana safety compliance facility whose license was suspended due to alle

Go here to read the rest:

Is smell enough to justify search warrant? Bloomfield Township man appealing decision on marijuana case - The Oakland Press

Former court reporter’s theft trial pushed back again – Kokomo Perspective

Its been more than four years since an investigation was launched into whether a former Howard Superior II employee illegally overcharged for work, allegedly accruing nearly $10,000 in illegal payments.

The case against former Howard Superior II court reporter Rachael Roberts has moved at a glacial pace since it began in the investigative stages in early 2015. Some time later, in May 2017, three level D felony charges of theft were filed for the alleged overbilling of transcription work, which by law is limited to a certain amount.

In total, investigators claimed Roberts overbilled by $9,476 for three transcriptions. As the case has dragged on after being assigned to a special prosecutor and languished in Boone Superior Court I after being reassigned to the court, yet another trial date has been pushed back in the case. The development came as Roberts defense attorney also moved to suppress evidence in the case.

Until just a few weeks ago, the case against Roberts finally was set to be heard before a jury in Boone County on Wednesday. That trial date represented the fourth for the case, and the date even had been emblazoned with no continuances in online records. That is before the court, according to court records, moved to cancel the trial due to concerns as to whether enough time [had] been allotted for this trial and to hear substantive pre-trial motions.

The case originally was scheduled to go to trial on April 18, 2018.

A partial reason for the delay may be due to a motion to suppress filed by Roberts attorney. In that motion her attorney claimed the former court reporters rights were violated by investigators.

According to the filing, on Feb. 13, 2015, police searched Roberts Russiaville home as well as her work premises in Superior II. Then investigators applied for a second warrant a few days later to search Roberts bank records. In the motion to suppress its argued that it does not appear that the warrant or subpoena was issued for a search of [Roberts] bank records and a return was not prepared for that warrant either.

The former court reporters attorney, in the filing, goes on to argue that the searches were warrantless, violating her Fourth Amendment rights. The filing states that police elicited statements from Roberts in violation of her Miranda and Fifth Amendment rights and that, because the warrants did not specifically list items to be searched for and seized, they were overly broad.

Furthermore, its claimed the warrants were not issued by a neutral and detached magistrate. This claim references Howard Superior I Judge William Menges, who issued the search warrants, and its argued that since he was a witness in the investigation, initiated the investigation in part, and also is related to Roberts, then that constitutes a violation of Roberts Fourth Amendment rights.

Together Howard County Auditor Martha Lake and Menges played a role in bringing the alleged overbillings to the attention of investigators. As such, Roberts defense counsel requested that all items seized, observations, and statements gathered during the execution of the search warrants be suppressed.

The court granted the motion to supress last week, but the courts decision could not be procured prior to deadline. The trial is set now for Feb. 24, 2020.

Read more here:

Former court reporter's theft trial pushed back again - Kokomo Perspective

My Family Story of Love, the Mob, and Government Surveillance – The Atlantic

On June 16, 1975, when I was 12 years old, my mother, Brenda, married Charles Chuckie OBrien, who a few weeks later would become a leading suspect in the notorious disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, the former president of the Teamsters union.

To hear more feature stories, see our full list or get the Audm iPhone app.

Chuckie had known Hoffa since he was a boy, loved him like a father, and was his closest aide in the 1950s and 60s, when Hoffa was the nations best-known and most feared labor leader. Soon after Hoffa went missing, on July 30, 1975, the FBI zeroed in on Chuckie. Chuckie had been by Hoffas side during Attorney General Robert F. Kennedys long pursuit of Hoffa for Mob ties and union corruption, and in 1967 it was Chuckie who had accompanied Hoffa when his boss reported to federal marshals and began a nearly five-year prison term. But in late 1974, Chuckie and Hoffa had had a falling out, and a slew of circumstantial evidence connected Chuckie to the disappearance. The FBI quickly concluded that Chuckie had picked up Hoffa and driven him to his deatha theory that has currency to this day, at least in the public mind.

The government never proved Chuckies involvement, and Hoffas remains have never been found. But the Hoffa investigation enveloped Chuckie and eventually ruined his life. In the midst of this maelstrom, Chuckie and I grew close. He formally adopted me when I was 13, and found time despite his legal troubles to give me the love and attention I had never received from my biological father. I revered Chuckie in my teens. The wise guys I met through him were kind and, to my young eyes, upright gentlemen. And it was thrilling to be associated with the Teamsters union in an eratypified by C. W. McCalls hit song Convoy and the adventures of Burt Reynolds in Smokey and the Banditthat glorified trucker defiance of authority.

When I left home for college, I read for the first time books that confidently pinned Hoffas disappearance on Chuckie. I also came to understand that the Mafia was real and dangerous, and that Chuckie had a history of criminal acts ranging from theft to assault. By the time I went to law school, I had grown apprehensive about Chuckies potential impact on my life. In my mid-20s I broke with him, brutally and completely. This proved to be a good career move; otherwise, I never would have obtained the security clearances I later needed for several government jobs, which culminated in a 2003 appointment by George W. Bush to be the assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Departments Office of Legal Counsel.

It was during that Justice Department stint, more than 15 years after I renounced Chuckie, that I reconsidered some of the things he had told me in my teens about executive-branch abuses and concealments. That reconsideration would eventually lead me to seek his forgiveness and then, after years of conversations and research, to conclude that he was innocent in Hoffas disappearance. What led me down this improbable path was my work on Stellarwind, President Bushs post-9/11 anti-terrorist program of warrantless surveillance activities inside the United States, conducted by the National Security Agency, which swept up vast amounts of information about innocent Americans.

In my youth, Chuckie had spewed bile about Bobby Kennedys surveillance abuses against him, Hoffa, and their friends in organized crime. They can break every law there is, but they got backup, Chuckie would say, referring to the governments tendency to skirt the law in secret even as it enforced the law against others, and to justify its actions by claiming executive authority.

For decades, I had dismissed Chuckies assessment as uninformed and self-serving. But while working on Stellarwind, I discovered that he had been right. Executive-branch lawyers had approved the program in secret even though it was difficult to square with congressional restrictions on government surveillance. Such backup, I came to realize, was a crucial element in a recurrent pattern in the history of government surveillance: The executive branch, responsible for security, employs the latest technology against an enemy within, and in the process, it often quietly bends or breaks the law; after scandalous revelations, it secures new legislation to put the surveillance practices on a sounder legal footing; finally, a new normal is established before the cycle begins anew.

I did not know much about the history of government surveillance, or the governments accompanying abuse of the law, when I began work on Stellarwind. Much of that history, especially about the Justice Departments accommodating role, is still not widely understood.

Since the invention of the telephone and the miniature microphone, the government has used these technologies in criminal and national-security investigations to listen in on private communications without the targets knowledge. The governments appetite for the valuable information it gathers from wires, bugs, and other forms of electronic surveillance has always been insatiable. Congress and the courts have intermittently imposed legal restrictions to check the obvious threat to privacy this appetite poses. But under pressure to find and defeat various subversive forces in American society, real or imagined, the executive branch has always found secret work-arounds.

Among the early targets, I came to learn, were Nazi spies inside the United States. On December 11, 1939, three months after Hitler invaded Poland, the Supreme Court ruled that a federal statute barred the government from using evidence gleaned from wiretaps in court. Attorney General Robert Jackson quickly announced a ban on wiretapping. But President Franklin D. Roosevelt overruled Jackson after FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover complained that the ban made it too hard to meet the growing menace of spies and saboteurs on American soil. FDR acknowledged in a secret memorandum that government wiretapping is almost bound to lead to abuse of civil rights. But he concluded, unconvincingly, that the Supreme Court never intended any dictum to apply to grave matters involving the defense of the nation. Jackson acquiesced, and government wiretapping continued.

Henceforward, whenever a legal obstacle to electronic surveillance arose, Hoover would complain to his Justice Department or White House superiors about the dangers of going dark. Given the urgency of finding and defeating the enemy, these officials tended to interpret away the limits on lawful executive actiona task made easier by the fact that decisions usually were arrived at in secret, beyond judicial scrutiny.

Hoovers next need for backup concerned a different threat to national security (communism) and a different technology (microphone bugs). In the course of its investigations, the FBI often broke into homes or offices to plant bugs. In a 1954 opinion, Robert Jackson, by then a Supreme Court justice, made clear that this practice flagrantly violated the Fourth Amendments prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. But Hoover wrote to the attorney general at the time, Herbert Brownell Jr., to emphasize the stakes for national security should bugs be barred. Brownell then secretly authorized the FBI to resume bugging spies, saboteurs, and other subversive persons, even if that meant physical invasion of homes and offices, because considerations of internal security and the national safety are paramount.

Hoover wasnt done. In the late 50s, he wanted to extend microphone surveillance to meet a different threat from a different kind of enemy within: not foreign subversion but the domestic criminal activities of gangsters. Bugging possible foreign agents was already a legal stretch. Bugging the Mob was an even bigger stretch, because breaking in to plant bugs on suspected domestic criminals goes to the core of what the Fourth Amendment prohibits. Hoovers FBI went there anyway, based on a preposterous interpretation of Brownells questionable secret ruling. The next attorney general, William Rogers, knew what the FBI was doing and went along with it. The bugging remained hidden from the public.

Rogerss successor, Robert F. Kennedy, continued this dont ask, dont tell approach to the use of bugs as part of the campaign against organized crime. He pushed the FBI to confront the Mob more aggressively, and he eagerly consumed the fruits of Hoovers surveillance. When the bugging was finally revealed, in the mid-60s, Kennedy denied knowledge of any illegality. A great deal of evidence suggests that he was not being candid. And as the journalist Victor Navasky has noted, To the extent that Kennedy was ignorant of the FBIs bugging practices, it was an administrative failure so flagrant that Kennedy is morally chargeable with the consequences of his ignorance.

The FBI made secret recordings from the hundreds of microphones it installed during the Kennedy years. Unbeknownst to Chuckie, the FBI frequently picked him up on two of them. In early 1961, the bureau placed one of the bugs in the office of the Detroit Mafia capo Anthony Giacalone, with whom Chuckie had been close since he was a boy. It later placed a bug in the apartment of Sylvia Pagano, Chuckies mother, in Detroits riverfront Gold Coast neighborhood.

The FBI was interested in Giacalone because of his criminal activities and because he had done business with Hoffa for decades. It was interested in Pagano because she worked with Giacalone and was close to Hoffa. Pagano had introduced Hoffa to the Detroit crime family, and to Chuckie, in the early 40s. She had enormous influence with Hoffa, including as a go-between for many of the loans to the Mafia by the Teamsters pension fund in the 50s and 60s. She was also close to Hoffas wife, Josephine, as was Giacalone.

A few months after the FBI installed the Giacalone bug, the Supreme Court reiterated that such surveillance was beyond the pale. But the FBIconfident in its backup from the topignored the Courts decision. For three years, the bugs swept up the full range of conversationnot just about criminal activity but also about sex, family and health matters, political and religious opinions, and personal secrets. FBI agents transcribed the conversations with few redactions. They often summarized the transcripts in memorandums that misleadingly attributed the information to an informant and urged care in dissemination. These documents were kept in a secret file called June that was unknown to the public and little known within the bureau.

I have read thousands of pages of the June transcripts and memorandums from the Giacalone and Pagano bugs. The FBI gave the documents to the House Select Committee on Assassinations for its 197679 investigation into the Mobs possible involvement in the killing of John F. Kennedy. Many of them are available today through the Mary Ferrell Foundation, which has a repository of documents related to JFKs assassination. To read the June transcripts is to descend into an intimate, vulgar, gossipy, and sordid realm of unguarded conversations that took place under an assumption of privacy. Chuckie had always spoken of Jimmy and Josephine Hoffas relationship to each other, and to his mother and Giacalone, as one of mutual love and friendship. But the conversations picked up by the bugs reveal a darker reality.

To give one example: The bugs expose Josephine Hoffas mental-health challenges and ghastly struggles with addiction. Hoffa was perpetually on the road during this periodunion business, criminal trialsand was callously indifferent to his wifes condition. Pagano was given responsibility for trying to control Josephines alcoholism, but she grew bitter as Josephine became more and more difficult to manage. To fight her desperate loneliness, Josephine had a fiery affair with a low-level Detroit mobster. Just after it ended, Giacalone plotted with his brother, Vito, to rob the safe in Hoffas Washington, D.C., apartmentHoffa was away on trial, in Tennesseewhile Vito and Josephine zoop it up. That plot failed when Giacalone could not get into the safe. But he succeeded a few months later in robbing Hoffas Miami Beach apartment while Pagano and a drunken Josephine were out to dinner.

These are but a few scraps of the information about Hoffas circle that the FBI gleaned from the thousands of hours of June recordings. The agents learned much, much more, because Josephine, Pagano, and Giacalone spent a lot of time togetheroften with Chuckiein the bugged rooms. They also communicated almost daily with Hoffa, usually through Chuckie, and often discussed, with the FBI listening in, what Hoffa was saying, thinking, and doing. Hundreds of other organized-crime figures and associates in Detroit and around the country involuntarily disclosed similarly intimate information to the FBI via illegal bugs in their homes and offices.

The bugs used on mobsters in the late 1950s and early 60s are a mostly forgotten slice of decades of surveillance abuses. Reform finally came after the FBIs practices leaked to the press in the mid-60s. The first element of reform was the Justice Departments acknowledgment of the bureaus bugging and wiretapping, and its pledge to the Supreme Court to review pending cases for reliance on illegal surveillance.

My stepfather was an improbable beneficiary. Chuckie had been convicted in 1965 of stealing goods from a U.S. Customs warehouse in Detroit. But in 1967, after thenSolicitor General Thurgood Marshall revealed that the FBI had overheard Chuckie talking to his lawyer about his case in Giacalones officea possible violation of his constitutional right to counselthe Supreme Court vacated his conviction and ordered a new trial, assuring Chuckie a tiny place in the annals of jurisprudence.

Later that year, the Court dramatically expanded Fourth Amendment protections against electronic wiretapping. Then, in 1968, Congress passed new legislation on the use of wiretaps and bugs. Authorization now required probable cause of a crime, a judicial warrant, and other procedures, and it criminalized electronic interception in violation of these rules. It put real constraints on investigations. But it also allowed the government, for the first time, to use information gained from electronic surveillance as evidence in federal trials. Congress thus legitimized what had been legally dubious surveillance practices, and on balance empowered the executive branch. The Justice Department would later use this lawful means of surveillance as its main tool to diminish the Mobs power.

This transformation of American surveillance law was followed, in 1975, by a comprehensive vetting of U.S. intelligence practices by a Senate select committee chaired by Senator Frank Church. The Church Committees final report exposed decades of electronic-surveillance abuses by the government, along with extensive evidence of illegal break-ins, mail opening, subversion campaigns, drug testing, and free-speech violations. Governmental officialsincluding those whose principal duty is to enforce the lawhave violated or ignored the law over long periods of time and have advocated and defended their right to break the law, the committee concluded. In other words, the violators had backup.

The courts and Congress still had work to do after 1975. One outstanding issue was whether the president could continue to order electronic surveillance without judicial approval in national-security cases, as FDR had done in 1940. Congress addressed that issue in the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), a landmark law that required electronic surveillance of suspected foreign agents to be authorized by a special court. This was the law that I would confront a quarter century later, when I began poring over cases and documents related to Stellarwind.

Stellarwind fit a familiar pattern. After 9/11, government officials faced a deadly new foe they feared they could not find and stop using traditional tools. Al-Qaeda had been empowered by technological developments, especially ones that enabled the growth of various new forms of global communications. But these and other innovations also empowered the U.S. intelligence community to surveil in new, more robust waysespecially because it had what thenCIA Director Michael Hayden described in 2006 as a tremendous home field advantage in intercepting global communications. In October 2001, President Bush authorized the NSA to collect targeted international telephone and email conversations of citizens and noncitizens, as well as vast amounts of telephone and email metadata. Government lawyers signed off on the program in secret, even though the collections lacked the judicial approval that FISA seemed to require.

When I arrived at the Justice Department, in October 2003, Stellarwind had been examined and reapproved by the Office of Legal Counsel every six weeks or so for two years. I inherited the responsibility of examining its legality at regular intervals. While I was doing so, I thought often about Chuckieespecially when I stumbled onto the 1967 decision that had vacated his criminal conviction.

While I was working one early-December afternoon, Jim Baker, a career government lawyer and surveillance-law expert, came by to help. Baker had not been involved in the initial approval of Stellarwind, in 2001, and when hed found out about it, he wasnt pleased.

Take a look at this, Baker said, handing me a piece of paper with scribbled signatures. It was a one-page memorandum, dated October 10, 1963, in which Attorney General Robert Kennedy had approved electronic surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr.surveillance that yielded information the FBI would use to try to destroy Kings marriage and pressure him to abandon the civil-rights movement. At the time, I was astonished to learn that Kennedy had authorized the surveillance, without a warrant and without limit, and that he had done so based on a factually unsupported link between King and communism.

From July/August 2002: The FBI and Martin Luther King

This is why we have FISA, Baker explained, jabbing his finger at the document. He saw the King surveillance as a cautionary tale about the dangers of government corner-cutting. If they think FISA is cumbersome or too slow, we can get rid of it, he said.

I didnt want to go back to those days. But I also didnt cherish the idea of upending an intelligence program that the president had deemed vital and that the Justice Department had approved since 2001, especially given that the government at the time feared another attack. After much agonizing, I concluded in March 2004 that prior Stellarwind approvals rested on a flawed understanding of how the program worked and what the law required. After a complex analysis, I disapproved the parts of the program for which I found no plausible legal support, but I upheld the parts I thought could be supported by plausible arguments.

My decision against parts of the program provoked a now-famous constitutional clash between the Justice Department and the White Housea clash that played out in part at the foot of thenAttorney General John Ashcrofts bed in the intensive-care unit at George Washington University Hospital. President Bush initially decided to continue Stellarwind despite the Justice Departments objections. But in the face of threatened resignations by thenDeputy Attorney General James Comey and thenFBI Director Robert Mueller, among others (myself included), he changed his mind and accepted the departments proposed narrowing of the program.

I was later praised by some for the steps I took in revising Stellarwind, and for standing up to the White House. Others criticized the parts of my legal opinion that approved portions of the program. With 15 years of hindsight, I dont think I would do anything differently, given the context back then. But the critics had a point, especially regarding my reliance on the presidents war and national-security powers to skirt the statutory requirements in FISA. My argument traced its pedigree to Roosevelts overruling of Jackson so that Hoover could continue looking for German spies. In fact, my opinion explicitly cited the Roosevelt precedent.

Chuckies complaints about illegal government surveillance and Justice Department double standards turned out to be valid, and they haunted me as I did my work. Especially because the person providing backup for a secret surveillance program was now me.

Amy Zegart: In the deepfake era, counterterrorism is harder

My work on Stellarwind focused on how the program operated and what the law required. I barely considered the harms of undisciplined government surveillance beyond its possible illegality. But a decade later, talking with Chuckie about the Hoffa case, I did.

A lead suspect in Hoffas disappearance in addition to Chuckie was Anthony Giacalone. Hoffa believed he was meeting his old friend for lunch in suburban Detroit on the day he disappeared, and the FBI suspected that Giacalone masterminded the crime to prevent Hoffa from reassuming control over the Teamsters union, which the Mob had infiltrated ever more deeply in the late 1960s, while Hoffa was in prison. The government could never prove its case. So it convicted the suspects (including Giacalone and Chuckie) of crimes unrelated to the disappearance, hoping to pressure them into talking. It used leaks and misinformation toward that same end.

One government leak emerged a year after Hoffa disappeared. On August 1, 1976, the Detroit News launched a three-day front-page series based on information gleaned from the Giacalone and Pagano bugs. The stories described a supposed Detroit Mafia plot to murder Hoffa in the early 60s; they explained the Detroit familys inner workings; and they included information about Josephine Hoffas alcoholism and the Giacalones plot to rob Hoffas Washington safe. The News never mentioned that the bugs had been illegal and a gross invasion of privacy, and it never paused to note that publication of this material compounded the problem. The Hoffa story was too big, the Mafia too unsympathetic, and the details too spicy. No one was going to complain about what the newspaper had done.

Years later, I sought Chuckies forgiveness for my two-decade rupture, and he accepted me back into his life without qualification, rancor, or drama. Our subsequent conversations led me to question the still-prevalent conventional wisdom that he had had a hand in killing Hoffa. Chuckies supposed betrayal of Hoffa destroyed his reputation and, more devastating to him, stained his honor. In my own investigations, I learned that the circumstantial case against Chuckie was full of holes, that the government had not disclosed evidence that cast doubt on his guilt and implicated others, and that FBI agents and government lawyers who had long worked the case had concluded that he was innocent. Indeed, in July 2013 the government was on the verge of giving Chuckie a letter of exoneration, only to renege in order to avoid political heat.

The Detroit bugs came up one afternoon in 2015 when Chuckie and I were discussing the Hoffa disappearance at his home in Florida, where he lives today with my mother. He was sitting uncomfortably in a recliner at age 82, wearing a medical boot to protect his diabetes-damaged left foot. When I asked him about the 1976 Detroit News feature, Chuckie gave me his usual rejoinder to bad news from the government. The FBI made all that bullshit up, he said. They can write down anything they want for the papers.

This claim was often sound, since the government had, I discovered, leaked a lot of false and misleading information about Chuckie over the years, especially early in the investigation of the Hoffa disappearance. But the newspaper stories contained accurate information, if illegitimately gained. He knew it, and I knew it too: I possessed the transcripts on which the stories were based, and many more.

I had long worried that showing Chuckie the June transcripts would upset him, because they painted him and his heroesHoffa, Giacalone, and his motherin a dishonorable light. They would also vividly remind him of one of the worst periods of his life, when he was for the first time trapped between what he described as his labor side (loyalty to Hoffa) and his Sicilian side (loyalty to the Mob).

In deciding whether to tell Chuckie that I possessed the June transcripts, I imagined how my beliefs about family and friends, and their relationships with one another and with me, would change if I encountered years of secret recordings of their unguarded conversations. I also tried to imagine how painful it would be to read my own unwary conversations, which would not always comport with my sentimentalized sense of self and of others. And I tried to contemplate how painful it would be to read and discuss ugly truths so many years after events in my life had played out.

In thinking about this, I came to appreciate more fully the evils inherent in the governments buggingthe original surveillance, the archival permanence, and the periodic revelation of the content. It wasnt just the chilling effect on Chuckies freedom of thought, belief, and speechan effect that stretched back decades, to the 1950s, when he first began to suspect that he was under surveillance. It was also, more painfully, the violence against his intimate spaces and relationships, and the annihilation of the stories he told himself and the world about these spaces and relationships, and thus of his power to define and shape his life.

We tend not to take these types of harm seriously when we consider bugs planted to gather evidence against Mob figures. We tend to think such people dont deserve privacy, because they belong to an organization whose mission is to violently defy the legal system. Even the Church Committee, which railed against the abuse of government surveillance, barely mentioned the massive surveillance program against the Mob, although that program was more clearly illegal than most of the other activities the committee condemned.

But the privacy harms are the same whether the target is guilty or innocent, bad or good. The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution accepts reasonable intrusions on private spaces in the name of law enforcement and national security. Yet harms remain present, a trade-off even for lawful government surveillance, which the Detroit bugs were not.

My qualms did not prevent me, that afternoon in Florida, from telling Chuckie that I had the transcripts on which the leaks were based. He asked to see them. I gave him one that showed that his mother had plotted with Giacalone to rob Hoffa.

Chuckie read with a blank expression for two minutes. Then he winced as if he had broken a tooth, and threw the papers across the room. I dont want to read this shit, he said, and I dont want to talk about it.

I was not surprised by this reaction. Chuckie was confronting evidence that shattered his constructed worldview. Practically everyone on the tapes viewed the powerful Hoffa in crass transactional terms. They wanted a loan, or help with a legal problem, or his money, or more of his time. Or they wanted to push him aside, or take advantage of him, or even knock him off. Hoffa was often treated with disrespect or disdain.

But not by Chuckie. In the thousands of pages of transcripts I read, no one displayed more affection for Hoffa than Chuckie did. In 1963, just after Hoffa was indicted on charges that would eventually send him to prison, Chuckie complained angrily to his mother that some members of the Teamsters executive board were jockeying to force Hoffa out. They dont care about Hoffa; they dont care if Hoffa lives or dies, Chuckie lamented to his mother in her apartment, at 6:04 p.m. on Thursday, June 13, 1963, as FBI agent Gerald R. McVittie illegally listened in.

Despite the secrecy of illegal government surveillance in the early 1960s, rumors of government snooping abounded at the time and sparked feverish concern about Big Brother. Newspapers and magazines were filled with stories about miniature microphone devices, radio transmitters, and other examples of what Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart described in 1961 as frightening paraphernalia which the vaunted marvels of an electronic age may visit upon human society.

In this milieu, Jimmy Hoffa believed that the FBI tapped his phone, opened his mail, and beamed electronic listening devices on him from half a mile away, aided by invisible powder they had rubbed onto his clothes, as Ralph and Estelle James recounted in their 1965 book about Hoffa. Whether the government illegally surveilled Hoffa himself (as opposed to just his associates) remains a contested historical question. But until the day he went to jail, in March 1967, Hoffa never stopped speaking publicly about the dangers of surveillance.

In the early 1960s, the paranoid Hoffa asked Chuckie to buy thousands of copies of George Orwells 1984 and distribute them to union locals around the country. Some of these poor guys, the only thing they knew was how to drive a truck or work at a warehouse, Chuckie told me. They didnt have the knowledge of the electronic shit. Mr. Hoffa wanted them to read that book and said that this is whats going to happen to not only us but to everybodyand exactly what hes predicted has happened.

Chuckie is basically right about Hoffas prediction. But there are several differences between today and the era in which Chuckie was secretly surveilled.

First, todays threats to privacy come not only from the government but also from the private sectorfrom Facebook, Google, Amazon, and the hundreds of other platforms, apps, and aggregators to which we daily turn over our most intimate secrets.

Second, the governments surveillance power has grown unfathomably since the 1960s. The frightening paraphernalia from six decades ago are toys compared with the redoubtable tools that allow the government to watch and record our movements and communications, and that enable it to store almost limitless amounts of data on its own or to piggyback on the masses of data that we volunteer to private firms.

And third, Congress has ratified and legitimated what were once legally tenuous surveillance techniques. It did so after the executive branch convinced legislators that the techniques were necessary for law enforcement and national security, but it imposed various legal constraints on their use. Congress had taken such steps in the late 1960s for domestic criminal investigations. It did basically the same for foreign threats, broadly conceived, first in the FISA law of 1978; then again in 2008, following public revelations about Stellarwind. Congress acted a few times when Barack Obama was presidentincluding after the intense controversy sparked by the thenNSA contractor Edward Snowdens 2013 leak of thousands of highly classified government documents about secret surveillance practicesand acted most recently in January 2018, a year into Donald Trumps presidency.

Jack Goldsmith: The cost of Trumps attacks on the FBI

The result of these developments is yet another new normal in which the government is constrained in certain respects but citizens are far more exposed to lawful government surveillance than before. This latest new normal, like earlier ones, will not prove stable. Technology develops apace. Sensors will soon be placed on practically everything. Facial-recognition and other biometric-identification techniques, along with drone and satellite surveillance, will become commonplace and extraordinarily discerning. Data-mining and pattern-detection tools, enhanced by artificial intelligence, will grow ever more powerful.

If history is a guide, the government will perceive a security advantage in using these and other tools in new ways to watch us and to predict and preempt our behavior. It will sometimes deploy the tools in secret, despite legal impediments, in order to prevent calamities threatened by new foes, many of whom will themselves be empowered by technological change. We will be outraged by the seeming excess when we find out. But the outrage will dissipate. Except in the most extreme cases of abuse or fecklessness, Congress will legalize the surveillance practice on the condition, mainly, of new procedural restraints. And we will adjust to our more naked selves.

This is a depressing conclusion for many, but it is an inevitable one. The executive branch does what it thinks it must, including conduct robust surveillance, to meet our demands for safety. The technology of surveillance races ahead of the law of surveillance, which tries to catch up in spurts, and often does an admirable job of curtailing old abuses. But the law cannot eliminate ever-growing threats, and security is elemental. And so the cycle recurs.

This essay is adapted from Jack Goldsmiths new book, In Hoffas Shadow: A Stepfather, a Disappearance in Detroit, and My Search for the Truth. It appears in the November 2019 print edition with the headline Jimmy Hoffa, My Stepfather, and Me.

Read the original here:

My Family Story of Love, the Mob, and Government Surveillance - The Atlantic

Best of the Decade: TV Shows with real world implications – Mashable

Look, we're never going to knock mindless entertainment, especially with all the *everything* going on.

But we also want to celebrate the stories we watched this decade that moved the needle out in the real world. Whether they be fictional series or narrative-based docu-series, the shows we chose just a few highlights, not all-encompassing are products of strategic work by writers and creators that illuminated some of our world's most pressing sociopolitical and environmental issues.

Below, eight vital shows that stuck with us and went above and beyond to utilize their platforms to give voices to the voiceless, remedy lapses in societal judgement, and tell vital stories, and, ideally, inspired their audiences to go out and do more.

Women protesting the Trump administration's immigration policies don 'Handmaid's Tale' garb.

Image: Kevin Hagen/Getty Images

Author of The Handmaid's Tale Margaret Atwood's assessment of her 1985 novel rings true: the story that captivated readers and audiences alike is "about now." Taking wardrobe cues from the Republic of Gilead in the not-so-distant future, women donned red cloaks and bonnets at protests all across the U.S., Ireland, Argentina, United Kingdom, Croatia, and Poland to make a harrowing statement about reproductive and abortion rights and gender inequality.

The first protest populated by handmaid lookalikes occurred in Texas: in March 2017 after Hulu staged a demonstration based on the then-upcoming show, members of NARAL Pro-Choice Texas sent women in the frocks to the Texas Senate in protest of a bill that would further restrict abortion access in the state. Two-and-a-half years later, the red cloak and white bonnet look has become a staple component in protests surrounding women's rights across the globe.

The real Central Park Five (Kevin Richardson, Antron Mccray, Raymond Santana Jr., Korey Wise, and Yusef Salaam) were instrumental in Durvernay's adaptation of their story.

Image: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

Twenty years after the landmark Central Park Jogger case, Ava Duvernay's dramatic miniseries told the stories of the Central Park Five, five teenage boys who were indicted and wrongly incarcerated one of whom was tried and punished as an adult (Korey Wise, portrayed by Jharrel Jerome).

In the years following the case, its prosecutor, Elizabeth Lederer (played by Vera Farmiga) remained the senior trial counsel at the New York County District Attorney's Office, and eventually became a part-time lecturer at Columbia Law School; Linda Fairstein (Felicity Huffman), who oversaw prosecution of the case, was head of the Manhattan District Attorney's Office's sex crimes unit and rose to fame as an esteemed crime novelist. Fairstein's work at the District Attorney's Office is credited for inspiring Law & Order: SVU.

Linda Fairstein poses with 'Death Dance,' one of her many crime novels.

Image: Amy Sussman/Getty Images

After the miniseries resurfaced the case and its mishandling at the hands of the two women, both faced immense backlash. Although Lederer's teaching position had already been protested by Columbia's Black Law Students Association, it took the public's reaction to When The See Us to provoke her resignation.

Fairstein's fate took a different route: she was dropped by her book publisher, Glamour Magazine effectively rescinded Fairstein's 1993 Woman of the Year award, and #CancelLindaFairstein trended on Twitter, and petitions called for her titles to be pulled from bookseller's repertories. Further, Fairstein resigned from the boards of Safe Horizon and Joyful Heart Foundation and that of Vassar College.

When Poussey was killed at the hands of one of Litchfield's correctional officers during OITNB's fourth season, fans were heartbroken. Samira Wiley's portrayal of the fun-loving, empathetic, optimistic, big-hearted character brought a silver lining to the narrative (intentionally) set in such a bleak and finite environment. Thus, the fictional Poussey Washington fund featured on OITNB's final season delivered bittersweet closure as Taystee used her late friend's namesake to help women formerly incarcerated make transition to life outside prison.

Seemingly in a parallel effort to allow the show to live on past its series finale, OITNB unveiled the (real life) Poussey Washington Fund, which supports eight non-profit organizations that focus on issues presented throughout the show's seven seasons.

The amount of real world change that Oliver's Last Week Tonight has enacted could be a standalone piece (and it is).

In one of his most memorable takedowns, Oliver exposed the FCC for attempting to not comply with net neutrality. The episode caused the agency to adopt net neutrality norms, and their servers crashed due to messages from outraged Last Week Tonight viewers. The impact that the host has had on global politics and governance is likely thanks to his accessible, approachable style and comprehensive reporting.

Steven Avery's history with the Manitowoc County Justice Department in Wisconsin is fraught with falsified accusations and coerced confessions, both of which are exposed on the hit Netflix docu-series, Making A Murderer.

After the show's first installment (which premiered in 2015), fans outraged by Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey's cruel fate appealed to the Obama administration in order to obtain a presidential pardon for the pair who were in custody in 2016. The White House responded by explaining that Avery and Dassey's cases were within the purview of the state of Wisconsin, not that of the federal branch. Therefore, Avery and Dassey would need to be pardoned by local officials.

But fans didn't stop after a plea to the top executive: in addition to the White House petition, another petition in Avery's honor on Change.org received over 500,000 signatures.

The current fates of Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey are unclear, though both of the accused are still crusading to prove their innocence. Avery is continuing to appeal his own conviction, while Dassey's legal team has asked that Wisconsin Governor Tom Evers grant him clemency, among other updates on the still-unfolding case.

The murder case surrounding the 1969 disappearance and death of Cathy Cesnik went cold in 1992. Twenty-five years later, The Keepers enlightened viewers about the alleged sexual abuse that haunted the halls of Archbishop Keough High School primarily at the hands of Father Joseph A. Maskell. As described in the series, many involved with the case believe that Cesnik had knowledge of the sexual abuse and was killed by Maskell (or, those associated with him) in order to silence her.

In a preemptive response to the claims unearthed by the docu-series, the State of Maryland extended the statute of limitations for victims of childhood sexual abuse, meaning women who were abused in high school that wanted to sue Maskell (or any related entities) could do so until they were 38 years old, rather than 25. This move from the State was meaningful: a 1995 suit filed against Maskell by two of the women he abused was thrown out because it had surpassed said statute of limitations.

Once the docu-series aired, the impassioned viewer response provoked the Baltimore police department to re-open the case. It all began with a form on the department's website (which is still active) that provided an avenue for survivors of sexual abuse related to the incidents detailed on The Keepers to report. Taking power into their own hands, the show's audience created a petition urging a grand jury to investigate the Archdiocese of Baltimore, as those associated are said to hold countless documents pertaining to the sexual abuse claims against Maskell.

Blue Planet II's finale tackled the harmful effects of human overuse of plastic. The response from viewership was a mix of outrage, surprise, and incentive; all of which took the forms of tangible efforts to cut down on plastic waste and pollution.

As described by Attenborough in his laud of the Blue Planet II audience crusaders, viewers cleaned beaches and modified their lifestyles pertaining to plastic use, local organizations worked to reduce their plastic footprint, and companies in Britain joined in on an initiative to reduce plastic pollution. Outside the U.K., Attenborough informs that China has spearheaded its own Blue Planet campaign against single-use plastic overuse.

What's more, outside research confirmed Attenborough's message: 88% of people who watched Blue Planet II's finale changed their behavior when it came to single-use plastics. Additionally, 60% of people reportedly choose reusable water bottles and coffee cups as a result of the knowledge they gleaned from the mini-series. Finally, Waitrose, the supermarket company that conducted the aforementioned research, reported an 800% increase in customers inquiring about plastic use in products and stores nationwide.

Produced, shot, and released amidst a world of "fake news" accusations and conflicting narratives surrounding immigration laws and practices, Netflix's Living Undocumented provides an unabashed look at the harsh realities of those living without legal status in the United States.

One of the most jarring revelations from the docu-series is the encounter between immigration attorney Andrea Martinez and two unrelenting ICE agents, all of which was caught on camera. As shown in the clip above, while working on deportation cases related to Luis Diaz, attorneys Andrea Martinez and Megan Galicia escorted their client into an ICE facility in Kansas, MO to reunite his son, Noah, with mother (and Luis's girlfriend) Kenia. Diaz transported Noah to the facility because both Kenia and Noah were to be deported to Honduras. After attempting to enter the facility with Diaz, two ICE agents forcefully pushed Martinez, causing her to fall onto the concrete and break her foot.

Later on, viewers see Martinez being wheeled out of the ICE facility, presumably after she requested medical assistance on behalf of her foot. The episode during which both clips appear is aptly titled "The World is Watching," and the series was shot throughout 2018.

After the docu-series's premiere in October, 2019, Martinez is demanding justice for the way she was treated: represented by the ACLU, Martinez filed a lawsuit suing the U.S. government for "excessive force" and "unlawful search and seizure" in violation of her Fourth Amendment rights.

As for the two ICE agents depicted in the episode (who have been identified as Everett Chase and Ronnet Sasse), Martinez is suing for assault, battery, false arrest, false imprisonment and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The lawsuit is being filed to the U.S. District Court, Western District of Missouri.

After the docu-series wrapped, Martinez has continued to advocate for immigration reform in a multitude of ways. She's still represents immigrants living in the U.S., in addition to reporting on and sharing immigration-related news via her Twitter account, and hosting a podcast titled Immigration Matters with her aforementioned legal partner, Megan Galicia.

Link:

Best of the Decade: TV Shows with real world implications - Mashable

FISA Court Finds The FBI Is Still Violating The Fourth Amendment With Its Abuse Of NSA Collections – Techdirt

from the no-surprises-here dept

The NSA isn't the only agency to abuse its surveillance powers. The FBI's ability to access unminimized data harvested by the NSA has resulted in abuse after abuse, as the FBI loves to use the massive data haul to perform "backdoor searches" of its domestic targets.

This concern has been raised repeatedly, most notably by Sen. Ron Wyden, who has been calling out surveillance abuses for years -- specifically calling out these backdoor searches and hinting (strongly) that they are much more prevalent than most people believed. Nothing much has been done about it, other than multiple federal agencies suggesting they too should be put on the ever-growing list of entities with access to the NSA's multiple collections.

A FISA Court opinion released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) details even more abuse of the NSA's Section 702 collections by the FBI. When you give an agency the power to dig into massive amounts of data with minimal oversight, abuses will happen. But this goes further than "inadvertent" collections or erroneous access of unminimized data. This ruling [PDF] -- first reported on by the Wall Street Journal -- shows the FBI treats sensitive collections as its personal playground.

The October 2018 court ruling identifies improper searches of raw intelligence databases by the bureau in 2017 and 2018 that were deemed problematic in part because of their breadth, which sometimes involved queries related to thousands or tens of thousands of pieces of data, such as emails or telephone numbers. In one case, the ruling suggested, the FBI was using the intelligence information to vet its personnel and cooperating sources. Federal law requires that the database only be searched by the FBI as part of seeking evidence of a crime or for foreign-intelligence information.

In other instances, the court ruled that the database had been improperly used by individuals. In one case, an FBI contractor ran a query of an intelligence databasesearching information on himself, other FBI personnel and his relatives, the court revealed.

The partially-redacted, 138-page opinion makes it clear the FBI has frequently abused its access to the NSA's surveillance collections, which include emails, phone numbers, and a host of other digital detritus. Using collections authorized only to be used for national security purposes to perform security reviews of FBI personnel is obviously contrary to the intention of the program -- a purpose that is always reiterated loudly any time someone suggests surveillance should be curtailed. This opinion vindicates Wyden's incessant demands the FBI come clean about its backdoor searches. Wyden argued the FBI abused this power frequently. This opinion makes it clear the FBI abuses its "backdoor" access to domestic data constantly.

The weirdest thing is the Trump DOJ argued in court the program the FBI abused cannot be modified without harming the security of the nation. Yep, the administration that claims the "Deep State" is out to get it showed up in court to argue the Deep State should not have its power curtailed.

The court rejected this faulty premise. It also pointed out how severely any misuse of this power contains the potential to harm dozens, if not thousands, of people. Considering the breadth of the collection, running a single improper search returns hundreds, if not thousands, of records the FBI has no business retrieving. Using the database to vet employees or perform natsec vanity searches does not comply with the restrictions on the FBI's searches, which are only supposed to return data related to criminal activity (and then only certain crimes) and/or foreign intelligence information.

As usual, Sen. Ron Wyden was the first to go on record criticizing the FBI and its backdoor searches following the release of the FISA opinion.

Last year, when Congress reauthorized Section 702 of FISA, it accepted the FBI's outright refusal to account for all its warrantless backdoor searches of Americans. Today's release demonstrates how baseless the FBI's position was and highlights Congress' constitutional obligation to act independently and strengthen the checks and balances on government surveillance. The information released today also reveals serious abuses in the FB's backdoor searches, underscoring the need for the government to seek a warrant before searching through mountains of private data on Americans. Finally, I am concerned that the government has redacted information in these releases that the public deserves to know.

Wyden makes good points. And they're points he's made for years. Unfortunately, the FBI continues to do the stuff it shouldn't and the public has to read between the redactions in an (often vain) attempt to see what's being done to them in the name of "national security."

The abuses will continue until Congress or the FISA Court decide they've seen enough. While both entities have chastised agencies with access to NSA collections, neither have taken any action that will head off future misuse of surveillance databases in the future. We're a reactionary nation when it comes to surveillance abuse and that's just not going to prevent future abuses. But that's the nature of the national security beast. No one's allowed to know what's going on until after everything bad has happened.

Filed Under: 4th amendment, backdoor searches, fbi, fisa court, fisc, nsa, odni, ron wyden, vanity searches

More here:

FISA Court Finds The FBI Is Still Violating The Fourth Amendment With Its Abuse Of NSA Collections - Techdirt

Column: Facebook May Be the Solution To Guarantee Citizens’ Liberty – Southern Pines Pilot

As the fog of Donald Trump obscures our political visibility, there are issues much more important than whether the president called Ukraine to obtain campaign dirt on Joe Biden.

Such issues are even more important than determining whether the dirt the president found forms evidence of a crime committed by Biden.

In the end, the fate of the former vice president and our current president are only important to a few pundits and Mitt Romney. It is more important to consider that the U.S. Justice Department and the global government gang are in a battle with Facebook to keep worldwide intelligence services in control of our private communications.

Facebook wants to technologically nullify the warrantless searches of electronic messaging heretofore open to government spy machines. Facebook wants to begin end-to-end encryption of such messages. The system would scramble all conversations so that they could be read only by the computer of the sender and the computer of the intended receiver. Not even Facebook would have the key.

In order to read such a message, a government official would need to go to court and obtain a warrant to seize hardware. Essentially, government would have to obey the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which forbids warrantless searches without an oath attesting to probable cause.

Last week, in a letter from the U.S. attorney general and the home secretaries of the U.K. and Australia, there was an urgent plea to stop the project. They insisted that intelligence services be issued a back door key to read our mail. These agencies want government collection of intelligence to trump citizens right to privacy.

To understand what is at stake, we actually need to bring Edward Snowden back from Russia. I would prefer to first honor him with a pardon, a medal and a ticker tape parade, in that order. Then his presence would enlighten the debate.

In 2013, Snowden revealed numerous global intelligence surveillance programs run by the U.S. National Security Agency and the Five Eyes Intelligence Alliance, a consortium of the U.S., Canada, New Zealand, The United Kingdom and Australia. These programs claimed access to almost all electronic communications worldwide. When Snowden revealed it, he was charged with espionage.

The intelligence services want us to believe that they only use such access for good. They want us to believe that without the power to read our private communications, terrorists will invade and more towers will come crashing down. Since the passage of the Patriot Act almost a generation ago, we believed them.

But these services did not use their powers for good. The most significant use of such power was a plot to spy on Donald Trump and his political campaign. Within Americas deep state, some think these powers are used to surveil the Trump administration.

For both Trump and the general public, lack of privacy creates an omnipresent state of surveillance, an existence incompatible with liberty.

I sympathize with those who want government to read the emails of drug dealers or airplane hijackers. Even James Madison, the probable author of our Fourth Amendment, understood that giving the good guys the right to feel secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects would pose an obstacle for the state.

But the 1778 anti-Federalist who wrote under the pseudonym Federal Farmer (probably Richard Henry Lee) in support of our Bill of Rights stated clearly that hasty and unreasonable (searches) not based on a warrant on oath and issued with due caution violate the rights of a free people.

It is time that we evolve from a nation in constant fear of attack.

In truth, our nation has not experienced a significant foreign invasion since the British burned Washington during the War of 1812. That is not to say we should be unconcerned about the possibility of an isolated terrorist attack; but neither should we give up our right to keep our private communications private. Our government demonstrates daily that it cannot be trusted with such authority. Such a potential for tyranny has been understood for centuries.

Hopefully, Facebook will restore its image as the champion of free communications by offering hack-proof encryption of our email. It will make government interception of privacy more difficult and will restore our right to be secure in our persons, houses, papers, and effects.

More here:

Column: Facebook May Be the Solution To Guarantee Citizens' Liberty - Southern Pines Pilot

Editorial: FBI violates the Constitution – Opinion – The Providence Journal

After the terrorist attacks of 9/11, when it seemed only a matter of time that weapons of mass destruction would kill thousands more Americans, Congress moved to make it possible to spy on people through warrants issued by a secret court.

Officials repeatedly assured Congress and the American people that this system would not be exploited for improper purposes and that sufficient checks were in place to protect civil liberties.

Unfortunately, they were wrong.

Last week, the intelligence community disclosed a finding by the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.

The court ruled that, in 2017 and 2018, the Federal Bureau of Investigation violated Americans Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches by the government.

As The Wall Street Journal reported in a front-page story (FBIs Use of Database Violated Privacy Rights, Secret Court Ruled, Oct. 9), the FBI searched a database of raw intelligence for information on Americans raising concerns about oversight of a spy program that operates in near total secrecy.

The FBI in 2017 and 2018 searched thousands or tens of thousands of pieces of data, such as emails or telephone numbers. In one case, an FBI contractor ran a query of an intelligence database searching information on himself, other FBI personnel and his relatives.

In the opinion released last week, U.S. District Judge James Boesberg said the FBIs procedures were not consistent with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. That seemed to be putting it mildly.

The program was supposed to be used principally by the National Security Agency, the Journal noted, to collect certain categories of foreign intelligence from international phone calls and emails about terrorism suspects, cyber threats and other security risks. This is a proper and vital use of the information.

Indeed, the Trump administration argued against modifying the program, maintaining it was effective in stopping terrorists. But after the judges ruling, it agreed to apply new procedures that will supposedly better protect the public.

We wonder: Where are the punishments for government officials and contractors who violated Americans constitutional rights? And when is Congress going to step in and make certain there is better oversight of the program?

Justice Department officials are currently investigating whether the secret court improperly provided warrants to the Obama administration to spy, in effect, on the 2016 campaign of Donald Trump. The great danger with secret courts, of course raised before they were first put in place is that government's spying powers could be improperly used against citizens, especially for political purposes.

Our constitutional republic cannot function unless the rights of citizens are recognized and enforced. Government must not use its immense intelligence powers for improper or political purposes, something that could very quickly turn America into a banana republic. The danger of surveillance of Americans is especially acute in our age of digital information, when virtually every step taken by a citizen with a cell phone or an email account could be tracked.

Congress and our free press must make sure that government powers are not abused and that constitutional rights are rigorously enforced.

Original post:

Editorial: FBI violates the Constitution - Opinion - The Providence Journal

Supreme Court May Be Preparing to Consider Several Major Cases on Qualified Immunity – Cato Institute

For the last couple of years, the Cato Institute, along with other public interest groups, academics, and lower court judges from across the ideological spectrum, has been urging the Supreme Court to reconsider the doctrine of qualified immunity. This atextual, ahistorical doctrine -- which shields public officials from liability, even when they break the law -- was essentially invented out of whole cloth by the Supreme Court in 1967. And the modern version of the doctrine, in addition to being unjust and unlawful, has proven incapable of consistent, principled application in the lower courts. There is thus every reason for the Court to reconsider its precedent on this subject, as many of the Justices themselves have already suggested. And now, with several major qualified immunity cases on the horizon, it appears the Court may finally be preparing to take up the matter.

The main reason for my suspicion here has to do with recent developments in Baxter v. Bracey. This is the case where the Sixth Circuit granted qualified immunity to two officers who deployed a police dog against a suspect who had already surrendered and was sitting on the ground with his hands up. A prior case had held that it was unlawful to use a police dog without warning against an unarmed suspect laying on the ground with his hands at his sides. But despite the apparent similarity, the Sixth Circuit found this precedent insufficient to overcome qualified immunity because Baxter does not point us to any case law suggesting that raising his hands, on its own, is enough to put [the defendant] on notice that a canine apprehension was unlawful in these circumstances" (emphasis added). In other words, prior case law holding unlawful the use of police dogs against non-threatening suspects who surrendered by laying on the ground did not clearly establish that it was unlawful to deploy police dogs against non-threatening suspects who surrendered by sitting on the ground with their hands up.

The ACLU filed a cert petition on behalf of Mr. Baxter, asking the Supreme Court to consider whether "the judge-made doctrine of qualified immunity" should "be narrowed or abolished." The Cato Institute filed a brief in support of this petition, as did a vast, cross-ideological array of other public interest groups and leading scholars of qualified immunity. The petition was originally set to be considered at the Supreme Court's long conference on October 1st -- that is, the first conference of the term, where the Justices resolve a large number of petitions that were submitted over the summer recess. Emma Andersson (one of the ACLU attorneys on the case) and I wrote a joint op-ed discussing the case back in July, and Law360 recently ran a detailed story on Baxter, asking "Could A Dog Bite Bring An End To Qualified Immunity?" All of us were holding our breath as the Supreme Court prepared to start its new term...

But then, something curious happened. On September 23rd, just a week before the Baxter cert petition was set to go to conference, the Court rescheduled the case for the conference of October 11th. ("Rescheduling" means the petition will be considered at a later date, and that the Justices have yet to formally consider it -- as opposed to "relisting," which happens after a petition has already been considered at conference.) Then, on October 8th, the case was rescheduled again -- no conference date is listed on the docket yet, but the next scheduled conference would be October 18th.

Why is the Court repeatedly rescheduling Baxter? It's impossible to know for sure, of course, but I suspect the Court may be waiting to consider the case simultaneously with at least two other cert petitions which will also raise the question of whether qualified immunity should be reconsidered -- specifically, those in Zadeh v. Robinson and Corbitt v. Vickers. Zadeh is the case where the Fifth Circuit granted qualified immunity to state investigators that entered a doctor's office and, without notice and without a warrant, demanded to rifle through the medical records of 16 patients. Judge Don Willett dissented in Zadeh, arguing that the Fourth Amendment violation in this case was "clearly established," but also discussing his "broader unease with the real-world functioning of modern immunity practice." And Corbitt is the case I discussed in detail here, in which the Eleventh Circuit granted immunity to a deputy sheriff who shot a ten-year-old child lying on the ground, while repeatedly attempting to shoot a pet dog that wasnt posing any threat.

Cert petitions have yet to be filed in Zadeh or Corbitt. However, the civil rights plaintiffs in these cases are now both represented by Paul Hughes -- co-chair of the Supreme Court and Appellate Practice Group at McDermott Will & Emery -- who has filed applications for extensions of time to file a cert petition in both cases. These applications explicitly state that the petitions will raise the question of "whether the doctrine of qualified immunity should be narrowed or revisited entirely," which is essentially the exact same question in Baxter. And these applications were granted, respectively, on September 17th and September 20th -- just days before the Baxter cert petition was rescheduled! Therefore, it seems quite likely to me that Court is planning to hold Baxter until around the time that the Zadeh and Corbitt cert petitions are also filed (which will likely be in mid-November), so that it can consider all three cases together. And that in turn suggests to me that the Justices are, at the very least, seriously considering the fundamental underlying question of whether qualified immunity should be considered.

Of course, this prediction is only speculation at this point, and even if the Justices are holding Baxter for something like the reasons I've sketched out above, that's no guarantee that they'll grant the petition. But this is, in my view, a promising development, especially in light of the Court's disappointing denial of the cert petition in Doe v. Woodard (which also asked the Court to reconsider qualified immunity) at the end of the last term. Perhaps, for whatever reason, the Justices preferred Baxter et al. as the vehiclefor taking up this question. Or perhaps they've realized that this issue is simply not going away. But by the end of this term, I suspect that we'll have a much clearer sense, for better or worse, of whether the Supreme Court intends to correct the unlawful, unworkable, and unjust doctrine it has foisted upon us all.

The rest is here:

Supreme Court May Be Preparing to Consider Several Major Cases on Qualified Immunity - Cato Institute

FBI worries Facebooks privacy first policy will be a child predators dream – The Sociable

An incredibly sensitive subject Facebook is looking to push a privacy first policy with end-to-end encryption, but the FBI worries it will be a child predators dream.

Facebook would transform from the main provider of child exploitation tips to a dream-come-true for predators and child pornographers

On October 4 FBI Director Christopher Wray gave usa sobering insight into how complicated the idea of privacy really is when dealing with child predators online.

Acknowledging that Facebook is saving livesby employing many people to help identify child sexual abuse imagery and alert the proper authorities, Wray said that we risk falling off a cliff if Facebook goes through with its privacy first policy.

Read More:Are you really buying Facebooks privacy-focused vision? Op-ed

Most of the tips Facebook currently provides are based oncontent. With end-to-end encryption, those would dry up. Facebook itself would no longer be able to see the content of its users accounts, the FBI director said.

Facebook would transform from the main provider of child exploitation tips to a dream-come-true for predators and child pornographers.

A platform that allows them to find and connect with kids, and like-minded criminals, with little fear of consequences. A lawless space created not by the American people, or their elected officials, but by the owners of one big company, he added.

The right to privacy is essential to any republic, but with privacy comes secrecy, and with secrecy comes shady deeds done in the dark a pendulum in constant swing between privacy and tyranny.

Read More:Politicians on both sides agree big tech needs regulation, American citizens are split

Im not going to pretend to take any moral position on this issue. Crimes against children are most horrific.

But using exploited children as a pretext for the most sophisticated law enforcement agency in the world to gain access to the allegedly private data of 2.4 billion people on Facebook would be one step towards tyranny.

The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny Aesop

The FBI director added, We also have no interest in any back door, another straw man. Wethe FBI, our state and local partnerswe go through the front door. With a warrant, from a neutral judge, only after weve met the requirements of the Fourth Amendment.

Weve got to look at the concerns here more broadly, taking into account the American publics interest in the security and safety of our society, and our way of life.

I can understand director Wrays frustration. Theres a serious problem with child predators, but the FBI wants cooperation from all tech companies in helping to eradicate this atrocity online, and once again were at the intersection of freedom and security a constant struggle between the people and the government.

Bad apples ruin everything. Remedies for bad apples can be poisonous as well. The FBI has had its share of bad apples, too. Many at the top have been forcefully removed from office, and trust in the upper echelons of the agency has seriously dwindled in public opinion.

We also have no interest in any back door, another straw man. Wethe FBI, our state and local partnerswe go through the front door. With a warrant, from a neutral judge

When Wray spoke of the FBI going through the front door with a warrant from neutral judge, I believe he was trying to do PR for the agency that has been implicated in secret FISA court abuses.

And just yesterday Ars Technica ran a story called FBI misused surveillance data, spied on its own, FISA ruling finds.

Bad press aside, FBI director Wray called on all tech companies to take measures to stop child predators.

But this is not just about Facebook, he said, adding, weve got to make sure tech companiesall of themarent taking steps that will place content beyond the reach of the courts. Or to blind themselves deliberately to whats happening on their platforms, where so much child exploitation takes place.

Weve got to make sure that companies cant keep creating unfettered spaces beyond the protection of law. Because there are kids out there we havent found, and dangerous criminals we havent caught, who are already moving on to their next victims.

And to his credit the FBI director did leave the conversation open, asking industry experts for their solutions to the problem of child abuse online.

So to those out there who are resisting the need for lawful access, I would ask: Whats your solution? How do you propose to ensure that the hardworking men and women of law enforcement, sworn to protect you and your families, actually maintain lawful access to the information they need to do their jobs?

Good questions indeed. What about you, dear reader? What are your thoughts?

Link:

FBI worries Facebooks privacy first policy will be a child predators dream - The Sociable

Impeachment and analysis by Sharyl Attkisson and James Rosen (Podcast) – Sharyl Attkisson

You are here: Home / Podcasts / Impeachment and analysis by Sharyl Attkisson and James Rosen (Podcast)

October 11, 2019 by Sharyl Attkisson 1 Comment

For those who want to understand the Democrats effort to impeach President Trump, the controversy surrounding the whistleblower, and what it all has to do with Ukraine, this podcast is a half hour well spent.

Investigative reporter James Rosen joins Sharyl in this episode. Subscribe to Full Measure After Hours and The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast on your favorite distributor and follow on Twitter @FullMeasureAF @SharylPodcast

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkissons work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Filed Under: Podcasts Tagged With: impeachment, James Rosen, Ukraine

Emmy-Award Winning Investigative Journalist, New York Times Best Selling Author, Host of Sinclair's Full Measure

Read more:

Impeachment and analysis by Sharyl Attkisson and James Rosen (Podcast) - Sharyl Attkisson

What Cars Can Teach Us About New Policing Technologies – The New York Review of Books

Whitney Curtis for The Washington Post via Getty ImagesA traffic stop in St. Louis, Missouri, July 25, 2017

This is not the usual story about cars and freedom: open roads, self-determination, adventure, individualism. The mass production of the automobile transformed twentieth-century America in unexpected and important ways. Foremost, and little-known, it revolutionized policing, spurring the development of police surveillance and increasing individual officers discretionary authority. Although this expansion of the states power didnt begin with discriminatory motives, the history of policing drivers makes clear that law enforcements surveillance practices havent invaded peoples privacy equally, but have reinforced existing inequalities. This is important to remember as contemporary concerns in the face of new technologies abound.

As I explain in my book Policing the Open Road (2019), modern policing developed in response to the challenge of managing all drivers. In the early 1910s, when mass-produced automobiles first appeared on streets originally intended for pedestrians, carriages, carts, and trolleys, they gave new meaning to the word traffic. If municipal officials were not dealing with the chaos of gridlock, then they were worrying about automotive speed, which posed dangers to life and limb that prompted comparisons to the recent Great War. One expert, speaking at a 1924 traffic conference at Yale University, claimed that during the nineteen months of the world war it was estimated that the loss of life by highway traffic accidents in the United States was pretty nearly twice as great as our loss of life through the war itself. According to the National Safety Council, the death toll from car accidents exploded from 4,200 in 1913 to 29,500 in 1932a 500 percent increase.

Local governments throughout the country immediately passed a long list of laws regulating the operation of motor vehicles. But they quickly ran into an enforcement problem: everybody violated traffic laws. In the 1920s and 1930s, few assumed that the police would enforce them. Before cars, when private citizens and businesses were the ones who investigated crimes committed against them, most towns and cities had small police departments that, by and large, dealt with those on the margins of society, like vagrants and drunks.

Overseeing the rest of society, the so-called law-abiding citizenry, was largely the task of voluntary associations. Churches enforced moral standards, trade groups managed business relations, civic groups instilled communal spirit, and fraternities and clubs maintained social harmony. The premise of voluntarism was that reasonable, respectable citizens would do the right thing out of a sense of decency or shame, reinforced by a watchful community. When individuals could not resolve disputes within these associations, they sued each other for tort or breach of contract. In both associational and common-law governance, the police typically did not get involved.

With the advent of the automobile, injured parties in car accidents continued to sue for tort damages. But not every act of bad or reckless driving resulted in a litigable claim, so it fell on voluntary associations to persuade drivers to obey traffic laws. Church ministers delivered sermons on Safety Sunday. Automobile clubs erected safety signs on busy intersections and helped direct traffic. The California Development Association mobilized a safety pledge drive, asking motorists to sign a certificate solemnly vowing to actively practice all safety precautions to the end that the appalling sacrifice of human life and unnecessary suffering caused by carelessness may be stopped.

Voluntarism, however, proved disastrously inadequate to the task of enforcing norms in the anonymous and rapidly developing new world of automobility. As a result, municipalities expanded their police forces to govern the streets, replacing the social scrutiny of neighbors and the community with that of individual officers. Predictably, many Americans chafed at law enforcements meddling in their freedom machines. At the same time, though, most people recognized that they needed to be policedor, rather, they wanted everybody else to be policed.

Traffic cops soon became regular patrollers on the lookout for more than traffic infractions. In a car society, auto theft became one of the most common crimes. The early decades of the automobile also overlapped with National Prohibition, and bootleggers and moonshiners preferred to move their goods under cover in trucks and cars. Officers realized that while they checked for safety violations, they could also search for alcohol and for telltale signs of a stolen car.

To keep up with these developments in police functions, courts throughout the country modified well-established laws to give officers more search powers. So, too, did the US Supreme Court in the 1925 case Carroll v.United States, which set forth the automobile exception that, to this day, allows officers to decide for themselves whether to stop and search a car without first obtaining a warrant from a judge. To justify these expansions of power and to give officers discretionary authority to inspect automobiles, courts pointed to the extensive traffic regulations that undercut drivers privacy claims. Ever since the 1920s, judicial opinions have reiterated that individuals have a lesser expectation of privacy in their cars whenever rationalizing the polices actions.

Police surveillance on the streets and highways, however, did not affect all drivers equally. Officers used their discretionary power to treat some as ordinary traffic violators and others as suspected criminals. The former were generally met with courtesy during traffic stops, while the latter were subjected to investigatory searches. Unsurprisingly, the assumptions and prejudices of individual officers informed their conduct. Although police departments didnt keep statistics on the number of traffic stops by categories like race, a wide range of sourcescourt cases, law review articles, letters to the NAACP, and even police textbooksindicate which groups tended to fall under police suspicion.

A 1963 article in the trade magazine Police listed characteristics of people who warranted special scrutiny, including lone male sitting in car and loiterers around public rest rooms, profiles that targeted gay men. The landmark 1972 case Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville, which overturned centuries-old vagrancy laws and celebrated freedom even in the seemingly mundane acts of wandering and strolling, involved two interracial couples who were arrestedapropos in the automobile agefor prowling by auto. Most citizens encounters with the police never became a legal case and would have been lost to history if organizations like the NAACP had not kept a record of their stories. In the 1950s, NAACP leaders in Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas reported a southwide pattern of arresting civil rights activists and fining them for minor traffic infractions. In 1956, the president of the Florida branch was beaten and arrested for double-parking his car in front of the local NAACP office. In an automotive society, police harassment of nonconformists, dissenters, and minorities often took place under the guise of enforcing highway safety.

By centurys end, the war on drugs blatantly relied on racial profiling on the highways, known officially by the US Drug Enforcement Agency as Operation Pipeline and, more colloquially, as Driving While Black. It is not surprising that many Fourth Amendment cases since the late 1980s involved a car stop of a minority driver for a minor traffic violation. The widespread practice of discriminatory traffic stops has not just contributed to the countrys disproportionate incarceration of black and brown people, but has also violated the dignity and rights of countless innocent citizens unjustifiably subjected to investigatory car searches.

Newer technologies have only bolstered the polices traffic surveillance capabilities. Computer-equipped patrol cars have now made it possible for officers on the road to check for outstanding warrants and revoked licenses, both of which often stem from unpaid fines or traffic tickets and disproportionately affect poor and minority citizens. A car stop on suspicion for driving with a revoked license is a common enough occurrence that a case challenging its constitutionality is before the Supreme Court this term. Once pulled over, the police, using their discretion, can continue the investigation beyond the initial traffic violation. The odor of marijuanaeasy to allege and difficult to disprove later in a court of lawhas so often been used to justify car searches that one New York judge declared that the time has come to reject the canard of marijuana emanating from nearly every vehicle subject to a traffic stop. Traffic law enforcement was originally intended to protect all citizens, but it has ultimately paved the way for discriminatory policing.

*

Just as the mass production of the automobile created unprecedented threats to the public sphere, new digital technologies are posing novel dangers. With constant news of data breaches, privacy violations, online harassment, and cybercrime, Americans are increasingly calling for greater regulation of the Information Superhighway, which, in turn, will require enforcement and surveillance.

Consider the proliferation of doxing, fake news, hate speech, and child porn on social media, which can undermine individual security as well as our democracy. Lawyer and sexual-privacy advocate Carrie Goldberg has criticized laws that shield tech companies from liability for what their users post. But calls for Facebook, Twitter, or Grindr to crack down on violent, offensive, and abusive content essentially amount to demands that they monitor everyone who uses their platforms. In short, our well-being depends on some intrusion into each others privacy, much as citizen-drivers realized a century ago.

Technological innovation also presents new issues regarding law enforcement that raise difficult questions about the tradeoffs between individual security and privacy. Cameras and drones that offer persistent surveillance are touted to reduce crime. DNA testing has the potential to solve cold cases. For example, in the 2012 Supreme Court case Maryland v. King, the defendant was arrested for assault, and when his DNA, collected as part of the routine booking procedure, matched a DNA sample from an unrelated, unsolved rape case from six years prior, he was convicted for that crime. During oral argument, Justice Samuel Alito remarked that the casethe first to challenge DNA collectionwas perhaps the most important criminal procedure case that this Court has heard in decades. The problem of new technologies is not just about shielding our personal information, but, more than that, about balancing the social benefits of surveillance with its threats to individual privacy.

In striking this balance, we must consider the specific harms to especially vulnerable groups that, in US history, have borne the real costs of surveillance in the name of keeping Americans safe. During the Cold War, for example, the FBIs COINTELPRO spied on and sought to neutralize dissenters from the established political order said to be a threat to American security, such as members of the Communist Party and activists in the civil rights movement, including Martin Luther King, Jr. In more recent echoes of this history, after the terrorist attacks on September 11, the police launched a surveillance program against innocent Muslim New Yorkers based solely on their religion. Some of the strategies included old-fashioned snooping, such as enlisting informants to spy on people, while others involved cameras mounted on light poles aimed at places of worship.

Big data poses another privacy concern, but these dangers do not affect us equally. The life-altering uses of big data are more concrete and dire for those caught in the criminal justice system. More jurisdictions now rely on risk assessment programs to determine an individuals likelihood of recidivism for bail, sentencing, and parole decisions. These programs use algorithms that compile and evaluate all sorts of life facts to try to predict a persons propensity for crime, and this information is used to determine whether that person gets bail and how long a sentence he or she will serve. Ostensibly color-blind, these algorithms actually rely on factors that not only correlate with race, gender, and class, but also incorporate the criminal justice systems pervasive biases. Once embedded in computer programs, these biases become much more difficult to challenge than those of human police, prosecutors, and judges. Big datas potential to threaten liberty is already a dystopian present, not the future, for criminal defendants.

Just as terrifying as the use of technology to forecast a persons future crimes is the governments efforts to build a DNA database. Justice Antonin Scalia dissented in Maryland v. King, arguing that gathering DNA samples from felony arresteesfrom those who had not yet been charged and convicted of a crimewas a significant intrusion into their privacy. He pointed out that the Supreme Courts decision was based on the assumption that DNA collection will not befall thee and me, dear reader, but only those arrested for serious offenses. Scalias indictment explains why more ink has been spilled over the privacy concerns implicated in consumer genetic testing than over the everyday privacy violations that are a routine feature of the criminal justice system.

Recent reports from Hong Kong not only highlight the dual nature of surveillance, but also provide a cautionary tale. What started in March as demonstrations against an extradition bill have grown into a broader, ongoing protest movement for greater democratic rights. As violence escalated, especially after the police started removing their identification numbers from their uniforms, demonstrators exposed police officers identities online as a way to check misconduct. But at the same time, authorities have relied on similar tactics, using facial recognition programs to identify protesters and to arrest leaders of the demonstrations. Surveillance technologies can keep officials accountable, but authoritarian governments can also use them to suppress dissent.

The health of our democracy depends on a vigorous debate about when and how the government can use technology, and these debates must include participation from all parts of society. Take, for instance, facial recognition software, which will, in all likelihood, become a standard feature of police surveillance tools in the United States in the near future. Its difficult to argue against aiding law enforcement in identifying criminals and exonerating innocent suspects. In fact, many early proponents of using facial recognition software, aside from law enforcement, came from minority and poor neighborhoods that were experiencing rising rates of violent crime. But facial recognition technology encountered significant pushback when it became evident that the software was highly inaccurate in identifying women and people of color. A new bill in New York would prohibit the use of such technology in federally funded public housing, and just this week, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed The Body Camera Accountability Act, which bans facial recognition capabilities on police body cams in California.

The goal of a democratic society should not be to stifle technological innovation, but to constantly reassess how we, as a society, will use these technologies. Under what circumstances can the police use cameras and facial recognition programs responsibly? How can the government ensure our security online without policing free speech? What ought to be the limits on law enforcements use of DNA to solve crimes? Which factors can the justice system use to determine pretrial detention, punishment, and probation?

In answering these difficult questions, we must give special attention to the ways that technology has historically and disproportionately affected political dissidents, minorities, and the poor. The history of policing and the automobile suggests that in the hands of human actors, technology tends to replicate the kinds of injustice and inequality that already exist in society. This is precisely why the struggle for equality is crucial to safeguard the privacy and civil rights of all, especially when new technologies are setting up another revolution in policing. In fact, we must treat the two goals as one and the same.

Go here to see the original:

What Cars Can Teach Us About New Policing Technologies - The New York Review of Books