Colonel Hogan
Madness
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2005
- Posts
- 18,372
And whichever side you take in Microsoft v. United States says a LOT about how you view the law.
We all know that "no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause," but this was a warrant issued clearly upon that standard. And if the 4th Amendment exists for the purpose of securing citizens from "unreasonable" searches and seizures, it just as surely secures the "reasonable" practice of law enforcement on behalf of those same citizens when reasonable searches are authorized BY court issued warrants.
Just as clearly, the material lawfully sought was wholly within the legal possession of Microsoft and under their direct control for possible production. It was not "possessed" by an Irish national. The possessor was Microsoft. Far more importantly, Microsoft was NOT the target of the search. They just held the electronic record. The criminal defendant was the object of the 4th Amendment search. Microsoft is more accurately portrayed as a material witness, and, as the government successfully argued in the two jurisdictions below the 2nd Circuit, in the position of having been served a subpoena which should not run afoul of the statutory deficiency of Section 2703 of the Stored Communications Act.
So why, you might ask, does that deficiency exists? Could Congress not have spelled out their intent better, or did they not, perhaps, do exactly that by NOT attempting to apply Section 2703 to American citizens BEYOND the physical boundaries of the U. S.?
Well, probably not. Beyond the obvious doubt that Congress had any reason to undermine the fulfillment of court-ordered search warrants, the 1986 enactment date of the Stored Communications Act and the relative newness of stored electronic communications at that time is more suspect as an explanation of the statutory deficiency. Computers stored records in 1986, but the computers themselves were traditionally stored in domestic homes and offices. Cloud storage was not at all common, if even contemplated. "Sneaker net" -- physically transporting magnetic storage media from site to site -- was still in vogue.
This case promises to be extremely interesting. It could easily be a 5 - 4 split along traditional liberal/conservative grounds, or Kennedy, Roberts and maybe even Alito could join the liberals for a 6-3, 7-2 decision against the government.
What say you?
Does the law "mean what it says (or DOESN'T say) regardless of what the lawmakers meant, or likely WOULD have meant had they sharper future vision? You know like our 2nd Amendment authors back in the day if they could have foreseen mass casualty shootings at elementary schools? Do appellate courts have the right to "legislate" from the bench to correct that lack of vision in light of technology that was arguably non-existent at the time of legislative drafting?
Funny how we keep coming back to the same arguments regardless of which amendment we are arguing about.
Keep an eye on this one, because that is exactly what's going on.
Monday’s addition joins a series of major criminal-justice cases on the justices’ plate this term. Foremost among them is Carpenter v. United States, in which the high court will ponder whether the government needs a warrant to obtain the location history of a suspect’s cellphone. Because the existing precedents are four decades old, whatever decision the justices reach will likely be a landmark ruling on the Fourth Amendment’s application to modern technology.
At issue in Microsoft is another ubiquity of the digital age: email. Federal prosecutors asked a federal magistrate judge to issue a warrant allowing them to search a Microsoft-provided email account. The prosecutors said they believed it was being used by an unidentified suspect “to conduct criminal drug activity,” according to court filings. The judge granted their request under Section 2703, a provision of the Stored Communications Act of 1986 that governs warrant applications for electronic records.
Microsoft complied with part of the request by providing some records on the account stored within its U.S.-based systems. At the same time, the company declined to hand over any data stored on servers at a data center in Dublin, which included the contents of the email account itself. Though Microsoft can access the account from the United States, that data—the zeroes and ones electromagnetically inscribed on a computer server—is physically located in the Irish capital. Microsoft’s lawyers argued this placed it beyond Section 2703’s intended reach.
The magistrate judge rejected Microsoft’s efforts to nix the warrant, as did a federal district court on appeal. The case then moved to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, where a three-judge panel sided with the tech giant. In her majority opinion, Judge Susan Carney concluded that Congress did not intend for Section 2703 to apply overseas when it drafted the Stored Communications Act in the mid-1980s.
“In keeping with the pressing needs of the day, Congress focused on providing basic safeguards for the privacy of domestic users,” she wrote. “Accordingly, we think it employed the term ‘warrant’ in the act to require pre-disclosure scrutiny of the requested search and seizure by a neutral third party, and thereby to afford heightened privacy protection in the United States.” Accordingly, Carney ruled, Congress did not explicitly allow the provision to apply overseas.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/10/microsoft-email-warrant-case/543027/
We all know that "no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause," but this was a warrant issued clearly upon that standard. And if the 4th Amendment exists for the purpose of securing citizens from "unreasonable" searches and seizures, it just as surely secures the "reasonable" practice of law enforcement on behalf of those same citizens when reasonable searches are authorized BY court issued warrants.
Just as clearly, the material lawfully sought was wholly within the legal possession of Microsoft and under their direct control for possible production. It was not "possessed" by an Irish national. The possessor was Microsoft. Far more importantly, Microsoft was NOT the target of the search. They just held the electronic record. The criminal defendant was the object of the 4th Amendment search. Microsoft is more accurately portrayed as a material witness, and, as the government successfully argued in the two jurisdictions below the 2nd Circuit, in the position of having been served a subpoena which should not run afoul of the statutory deficiency of Section 2703 of the Stored Communications Act.
So why, you might ask, does that deficiency exists? Could Congress not have spelled out their intent better, or did they not, perhaps, do exactly that by NOT attempting to apply Section 2703 to American citizens BEYOND the physical boundaries of the U. S.?
Well, probably not. Beyond the obvious doubt that Congress had any reason to undermine the fulfillment of court-ordered search warrants, the 1986 enactment date of the Stored Communications Act and the relative newness of stored electronic communications at that time is more suspect as an explanation of the statutory deficiency. Computers stored records in 1986, but the computers themselves were traditionally stored in domestic homes and offices. Cloud storage was not at all common, if even contemplated. "Sneaker net" -- physically transporting magnetic storage media from site to site -- was still in vogue.
This case promises to be extremely interesting. It could easily be a 5 - 4 split along traditional liberal/conservative grounds, or Kennedy, Roberts and maybe even Alito could join the liberals for a 6-3, 7-2 decision against the government.
What say you?
Does the law "mean what it says (or DOESN'T say) regardless of what the lawmakers meant, or likely WOULD have meant had they sharper future vision? You know like our 2nd Amendment authors back in the day if they could have foreseen mass casualty shootings at elementary schools? Do appellate courts have the right to "legislate" from the bench to correct that lack of vision in light of technology that was arguably non-existent at the time of legislative drafting?
Funny how we keep coming back to the same arguments regardless of which amendment we are arguing about.
Keep an eye on this one, because that is exactly what's going on.