FBI Must Reveal Computer Snooping Technique -Judge

From: dhibbelnat_private
Date: Wed Aug 08 2001 - 09:51:16 PDT

  • Next message: D. Douglas Rehman: "RE: Forensics Workstations: summary"

    Folks,
    This was forwarded to me by a friend:
    
    <snip>
    Tuesday August 7 6:28 PM ET 
    
    FBI Must Reveal Computer Snooping Technique -Judge
    
    NEWARK, N.J. (Reuters) - A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the
    government to reveal the high-tech computer snooping technique used by
    the FBI (news - web sites) to gather evidence against an alleged
    mobster. 
    
    In a case that privacy advocates say smacks of Big Brother, U.S.
    District Judge Nicholas Politan ruled that the government must reveal
    the details of the computer monitoring system it used to gather evidence
    against Nicodemo Scarfo Jr., who is charged with running illegal
    gambling and loan-sharking operations for the Gambino crime family. 
    
    Scarfo is the son of imprisoned mobster Nicodemo ``Little Nicky''
    Scarfo. 
    
    The case is believed to be the first in the nation in which federal
    agents installed a secret surveillance system in a personal computer
    system under search warrant, and the first to be tested in U.S. courts. 
    
    The FBI recorded virtually every keystroke made on Scarfo's computer at
    his Belleville, New Jersey, business, including passwords, using a ``key
    logger'' device. 
    
    Whether the system is hardware or software is unknown, prompting a
    motion by Scarfo's attorneys to reveal its makeup so they could have it
    analyzed and make a case to suppress the evidence it gathered. 
    
    Politan ruled that in order to decide the lawfulness of the government
    surveillance, he must see a full report on how the device works,
    imposing an Aug. 31 deadline. 
    
    ``In this new age of rapidly evolving technology, the court cannot make
    a determination as to the lawfulness of the government's search ...
    without knowing specifically how the search was effectuated,'' he wrote.
    
    
    ``This requires an understanding of how the key logger device functions.
    In most, if not all search and seizure cases, the court ... understands
    the particular method by which the search is executed. ... Because of
    the advanced technology used the court does not have the benefit of such
    an understanding.'' 
    
    The government argued that revealing the workings of the system might
    jeopardize national security and endanger FBI personnel and those
    working with them. 
    
    Politan gave the government 10 days to provide additional evidence as to
    why revealing the technology would endanger ongoing investigations and
    later national security operations. 
    <snip>
    
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