CRIME Trust us, it's only for terrorists. OR "Shield law? What shield law?"

From: Todd Ellner (tellner@private)
Date: Mon Sep 29 2003 - 17:27:23 PDT

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    [Not that anyone is surprised, mind you. I'm starting a betting pool on how
    long it will be before the first US citizen in a non-terrorist criminal case
    is "transferred to a third country for interrogation".]
    
    In the wake of the NYTimes story (http://www.nytimes
    com/2003/09/28/politics/28LEGA.html ) on the Patriot Act being used for
    general law enforcement comes a case a little closer to home.
    
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/33106.html
    
     
    FBI bypasses First Amendment to nail a hacker
    By Mark Rasch, SecurityFocus
    Posted: 29/09/2003 at 16:35 GMT
    
    
      
    Citing a provision of the Patriot Act, the FBI is sending letters to
    journalists telling them to secretly prepare to turn over their notes,
    e-mails and sources to the bureau. Should we throw out the First Amendment
    to nail a hacker, writes SecurityFocus columnist Mark Rasch. 
    
    Frequent readers of this space know that I am no apologist for hackers like
    Adrian Lamo, who, in the guise of protection, access others' computer
    systems without authorization, and then publicize these vulnerabilities. 
    
    When Lamo did this to the New York Times, he violated two of my cardinal
    rules: Don't make enemies with people appointed for life by the President of
    the United States; and don't make enemies of people who buy their ink by the
    gallon. 
    
    Now, in the scope of prosecuting Lamo, the FBI is doing the hacker one
    better by violating both of these precepts in one fell swoop. 
    
    The Bureau recently sent letters to a handful of reporters who have written
    stories about the Lamo case -- whether or not they have actually interviewed
    Lamo. The letters warn them to expect subpoenas for all documents relating
    to the hacker, including, apparently, their own notes, e-mails, impressions,
    interviews with third parties, independent investigations, privileged
    conversations and communications, off the record statements, and expense and
    travel reports related to stories about Lamo. 
    
    In short, everything. 
    
    The notices make no mention of the protections of the First Amendment,
    Department of Justice regulations that restrict the authority to subpoena
    information from journalists, or the New York law that creates a "newsman's
    shield" against disclosure of certain confidential information by reporters.
    
    
    Instead, the FBI has threatened to put these reporters in jail unless they
    agree to preserve all of these records while they obtain a subpoena for them
    under provisions amended by the USA-PATRIOT Act. 
    
    The government also officiously informed the reporters that this is an 
    official criminal investigation" and asks that they not disclose the request
    to preserve documents, or the contents of the letter, to anyone --
    presumably including their editors, directors, or lawyers -- under the
    implied threat of prosecution for obstruction of justice. 
    
    That's why you're reading about the letters for the first time here. 
    
    They do this despite the fact that, had they actually obtained and issued a
    subpoena for these documents, the federal criminal procedure rules would
    have prohibited the imposition of any obligation of secrecy unless the
    Justice Department obtained a "gag" order on the press -- a rare event
    indeed. 
    
    All of this began the day after the Attorney General advised all United
    States Attorney's Offices to prosecute each and every criminal offense with
    the harshest possible penalties, instead of the previous policy of
    prosecuting cases with the penalties that most accurately reflect the
    seriousness of the offense. Thus, journalists be forewarned -- your
    government may be seeking to throw the book at you! 
    
    Believe it or not, this isn't even the worst of it. 
    
    Patriot Games 
    
    The demand that journalists preserve their notes is being made under laws
    that require ISP's and other "providers of electronic communications
    services" to preserve, for example, e-mails stored on their service, pending
    a subpoena, under a statute modified by the USA-PATRIOT Act. 
    
    The purpose of that law was to prevent the inadvertent destruction of
    ephemeral electronic records pending a subpoena. For example, you could tell
    an ISP that you were investigating a hacking case, and that they should
    preserve the audit logs while you ran to the local magistrate for a subpoena
     
    
    It was never intended to apply to journalist's records. 
    
    Similarly, the letters go on to inform the reporters that the FBI intends to
    get an order for production of records under the Electronic Communication
    Transactional Records Act, a statute that applies only to ISPs. Citing that
    law, they insist that the journalist is mandated to preserve records for at
    least the next three months and possibly longer. This demand is all the more
    egregious in that it comes more than a year after the articles and
    interviews first appeared -- after any actual Internet logs would have been
    routinely deleted. 
    
    There are times -- few and far between -- when it may be essential in a
    criminal investigation or prosecution to subpoena a member of the press. Say
     for example, a cameraman gets a picture of a crime in progress, and the
    photograph or videotape is published or broadcast, and the prosecution seeks
    to use it at trial. Or suppose that O.J. Simpson, after the murders in
    Brentwood, chose to unload his soul to Barbara Walters. That admission may
    require hauling Ms. Walters to the stand, if -- and this is a big "if" --
    there is no other way to obtain crucial evidence. 
    
    But before a subpoena can be issued to a reporter under federal regulations
    and internal DOJ guidelines, not only must the Attorney General personally
    approve the subpoena, but prosecutors are instructed to use all reasonable
    efforts to get the information from other sources. The New York State
    newsman's shield law that applies to the Lamo prosecution requires
    essentially the same thing. 
    
    Even if such a subpoena is issued, government regulations mandate that,
    absent exigent circumstances, it must be limited to the verification of
    published information, and to such surrounding circumstances as relate to
    the accuracy of the published information. 
    
    Breaking the Rules 
    
    And yet, the FBI is demanding that reporters preserve every scrap of
    documentation about everything having to do with Adrian Lamo -- and has
    expressly told them that if they fail to do this for at least three months,
    and perhaps longer, they can expect to be prosecuted for contempt of court. 
    
    The DOJ guidelines also mandate that before a subpoena is issued, even for
    public information (e.g., a copy of a Dateline NBC videotape), there has to
    be a good faith effort to obtain the records by negotiation with the
    reporter. But no negotiation has occurred in this case. 
    
    I wish I could say this was a first. But in May of 2002, prosecutors
    investigating the very same Lamo case issued an unauthorized subpoena to
    MSNBC.com's Bob Sullivan for his notes and records. The subpoena was hastily
    withdrawn when it was noted that it had never been approved by the Attorney
    General, as mandated by regulation, and that the prosecutor -- who was
    reported as "inexperienced" -- didn't even realize that he had to obtain
    such approval. 
    
    And in March of 2001, the Department of Justice subpoenaed then-Wired.com
    reporter Declan McCullagh to testify in a criminal case, also in violation
    of the regulations. 
    
    While the FBI has reportedly told reporters that this time they will seek
    Attorney General approval before issuing subpoenas, there does not appear to
    have been any effort to obtain any that approval before threatening to
    prosecute these reporters with obstruction of justice under a statute that
    facially does not apply to them. 
    
    It's as though the FBI believes that Attorney General approval is a mere
    formality, ignoring the regulations that require negotiations with reporters
    first, and reportedly stating that all reporters can expect to be required
    to "turn it all over." 
    
    So why would the government need to put a reporter on the stand to testify
    that she interviewed Adrian Lamo, and that Lamo confessed? 
    
    Presumably to demonstrate that Lamo in fact hacked into the New York Times.
    I would certainly hope that the government would be able to prove this
    through other means -- like the IP logs. But if you peruse the affidavit
    submitted by the FBI to arrest Adrian Lamo, you begin to wonder. The
    affidavit is rife with references to articles written by Security Focus
    reporter Kevin Poulsen, and MSNBC.com's Sullivan, as their principal 
    evidence" of Lamo's guilt. 
    
    Might it be helpful to the government to enlist all journalists Lamo spoke
    to as criminal investigators -- doing the prosecutors' job for them? Sure.
    Would it make the FBI's job easier? No doubt. But the law requires that the
    information sought by subpoena be highly relevant and not available
    elsewhere. The government has not even tried to make this showing. 
    
    Nor have they limited their request to preserve evidence to verification of
    the published information. In fact, if all they wanted was verification of
    published information, no document preservation would be necessary. You
    simply call the reporter to the stand and ask, "Hey, when you said in your
    article that Lamo confessed, was that true?" End of subpoena. 
    
    So there must be a more sinister motive behind this preservation request.
    And there must be a more sinister motive behind using the ISP statute to do
    so. 
    
    Secret Orders 
    
    There are really only three reasons the government would invoke the ISP
    statute against journalists. All of these possibilities are frightening in
    their implications. 
    
    They may think that reporters who write stories for online publications or
    who use e-mail to communicate with sources (and whose news organizations
    maintain their own Internet connections) are, in fact, "providers of
    electronic communications" under the law. The statute is clearly geared at
    mandating the preservation of ephemeral electronic records by ISP's, but
    perhaps the Department of Justice is attempting to use the fact that
    reporters use electronic communications as a jurisdictional hook to order
    them to preserve their physical notes -- a dramatic, unprecedented and
    unwarranted expansion of the statute. 
    
    More sinister is the possibility that these letters were never intended to
    go to the reporters at all, but rather were actually intended to go to their
    ISPs. You see, the regulation that mandates Attorney General approval
    applies only to subpoenas to reporters, or to telephone companies to get a
    reporter's telephone records. Because the regulation is 20-years-old, it
    does not address the possibility that you could actually get the content of
    a reporters communications from a third party -- an ISP -- without
    subpoenaing the reporter herself. So the whole thing could be intended as an
    end-run around for the First Amendment. 
    
    Finally, it is possible that the FBI knew that the ISP statute didn't apply
    to the reporters, but simply wanted to threaten or intimidate them with the
    possibility of an obstruction of justice prosecution. But, as the Enron
    auditors at Arthur Anderson learned, all the government has to do is tell
    the reporters that their information may be relevant to the prosecution or
    defense of the case, and this would put them on notice that destroying their
    records in anticipation of litigation would constitute obstruction. There
    was no need for the heavy handed threat. 
    
    None of this explains the cloak of secrecy the FBI has thrown over the whole
    affair. Reporters are being told that this is an official criminal
    investigation, and asked not to tell anyone. Even the DOJ's proposals for
    secret administrative subpoenas announced this month as part of USA-PATRIOT
    II would allow recipients of such subpoenas to confer with their own lawyers
    and others necessary to enforce the subpoena. The FBI request here made it
    clear that they didn't want the reporters talking to anyone, because that
    would supposedly harm the ongoing criminal investigation. 
    
    And yet the FBI publicly announced to the world, through a Wired.com
    reporter, their intention to subpoena every journalist who ever talked to
    Adrian Lamo. Apparently, the FBI can talk about their intention to subpoena
    reporters, and mention specific reporters' names in the Lamo affidavit, but
    if journalists have the temerity to mention it to their own lawyers, this
    could devastate the prosecution. 
    
    I've never spoken to Adrian Lamo, but I am sure that by writing this article
     I am making myself a target for subpoenas, search warrants (government,
    take note that the law prohibits search warrants for reporter's notes) and
    demands to preserve evidence. All I have to say is, quoting President George
    W. Bush, "Bring it on." 
    
     
    



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