gnu@hoptoad.uucp (John Gilmore) (02/21/86)
I got a copy of the bill (HR3378, S1667) by calling Sen. Leahy's office. One thing that this bill does is legalizes the use of "tracking devices" by law enforcement people, after getting a court order. It puts various restrictions on their use, but basically says that if the cops want to put a bug on your car, person, clothes, or whatever, they are likely to be able to find a legal way to do it. Furthermore, they can plant the device *before* obtaining a court order, as long as they take it away "when the information sought is obtained, or when the application for the [court] order is denied". They have 48 hours to file the application for the court order, i.e. they can track you for 2 days without breaking the law and without getting a court's permission. If they find out what they need to know, they can remove the bug and no harm done. RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIGHT! It treats this kind of bug as almost equivalent to a "pen register", which is something the phone co. puts on your line to record who you are calling. The bill also defines "pen register" to include "a device which records and/or decodes electronic or other impulses which identify the numbers dialed *or otherwise transmitted* on the telephone line..." This definition includes any data transmitted on the line, and could be construed to include digitized voice ("numbers"). It makes it legal for the cops to break and enter your house, car, or wherever in order to install a bug or wiretap. It nicely provides that the government may not force someone who operates a communications system to break and enter to plant government bugs. I'm sure the Communications Workers of America are happy to hear it. It loosens a number of restrictions on actual wiretaps too, including allowing officials below the level of Assistant Attorney General to approve them, expanding the list of suspected crimes that you can wiretap for, and allowing 48 hours instead of "ASAP" for making the recordings available to the judge. I find all of this utterly repugnant and don't see how it has any place in a "Privacy of private communications" bill. This bill is being pushed "because somehow we forgot to protect non-voice information going over phone lines". But check Covert Action Information Bulletin #11, December 1980, pg 37: "Our Department of Defense and Department of Justice have been extremely careful in orchestrating the legal definition of 'interception' to *exclude* the acquisition of information of a non-oral nature." (emphasis theirs) The NSA has been using this loophole for years. I'm sure they aren't closing it off unless the bill opens another hole at least as big. I don't know if Congress thought it was legalizing wiretapping of datacomm when they passed it last time. What are they writing into law that they don't understand this time? I'm sure that some of the new wordings and definitions in today's bill will have similar effects. See net.ham-radio for some of the problems. -- John Gilmore {sun,ptsfa,lll-crg,ihnp4}!hoptoad!gnu jgilmore@lll-crg.arpa
rpt@warwick.UUCP (Richard Tomlinson) (02/25/86)
[food] Can I suggest that discussion of legal issues is restricted to the country in which the law applies. Discussion of USA legislation is of no interest to us in Europe. -- ...!mcvax!ukc!warwick!rpt