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Gov't Sued Over Cell Phone Tracking
NEW YORK - If you are a U.S.
resident who owns a cell phone, you should care about the outcome of a
court case that "could well decide whether the government can use your
cell phone to track you - even if it hasn't shown probable cause to
believe it will turn up evidence of a crime."
That was the warning
issued to the public by several major civil liberties organizations as
they appeared in federal court in Philadelphia to argue for more
privacy protections in the use of cell phones as tracking devices by
law enforcement agents.
The
case is at the heart of the constitutional crisis now being played out
in the U.S. federal court. Civil liberties groups are asking the court
to require that the government show probable cause before it can track
your whereabouts.
The groups are the Electronic Frontier
Foundation (EFF), the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the ACLU
of Pennsylvania, and the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT).
Back
in 2007, the U.S. government applied for court permission to obtain
information about the location of an individual's cell phone, without
showing probable cause that tracking the individual would turn up
evidence of a crime.
A magistrate judge denied the government's
request and a district court upheld that decision in September 2008.
The government is appealing the ruling in the U.S. Court of Appeals.
A
number of civil liberties groups, on behalf of plaintiffs in the case,
filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the district court
decision, arguing that district courts must require the government to
show probable cause before permitting the government to obtain
information about the location of a cell phone.
The appeals
court will decide whether government agencies in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and Delaware must show probable cause before tracking people's
cell phone locations.
EFF explains that, although most people don't realize it, cell phones double as tracking devices.
"Newer
phones contain GPS chips, the same technology that allows car
navigation systems to know where you are and give you driving
directions. But even older phones that don't have chips can be tracked
by knowing the location of the cell towers they use to connect to a
network," the group said.
"There's no question that cell
phones and cell-phone records can be useful for police officers who
need to track the movements of those they believe to be breaking the
law," the group added. "And it is important for law enforcement agents
to have the tools they need to stop crimes. However, it is just as
important to make sure such tools are used responsibly, in a manner
that safeguards our personal privacy."
Prof. Francis A. Boyle of
the University of Illinois law school told IPS that the practice
violates the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which states in
part that "no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported
by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be
searched."
"The [George W.] Bush administration reduced the
Fourth Amendment to nothing more than a Potemkin Village of rights,"
Boyle said. "It exists on paper alone. And a pusillanimous Congress has
gone along with shredding the entirety of the U.S. Bill of Rights."
"Pres.
Obama, the former constitutional law professor, is actively defending
in court every hideous atrocity that the Bush administration inflicted
upon the Bill of Rights, civil rights, civil liberties, human rights,
international law, and the United States Constitution with the
acquiescence and/or approval by Congress," he said.
This issue
gained national attention during last year's gubernatorial race in New
Jersey. Documents turned over in EFF's lawsuit revealed that "the U.S.
Attorney's Office - under Chris Christie, now the governor - was
tracking cell phones without probable cause, in violation of a Justice
Department recommendation," EFF said.
The decision reached by
the Philadelphia-based Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals will not
only bind federal courts throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey and
Delaware. It will also be a key source of guidance to courts around the
country as they grapple with this issue.
The plaintiffs in the
court case hope the court will "send a message that merely carrying a
cell phone should not make people more susceptible to government
surveillance."
They add, "No one wants to feel as if a
government agent is following her wherever she goes - be it a friend's
house, a place of worship, or a therapist's office - and innocent
Americans shouldn't have to feel that way."
The government has
argued that "One who does not wish to disclose his movements to the
government need not use a cellular telephone."
But the civil
liberties groups say this is "a startling and dismaying statement
coming from the United States. The government is supposed to care about
people's privacy. It should not be forcing the nation's 277 million
cell-phone subscribers to choose between risking being tracked and
going without an essential communications tool."
The case has
drawn considerable national attention. One of the country's foremost
investigative journalists, Michael Isikoff of Newsweek, addressed the
issue in a recent edition of the magazine.
He wrote, "Law
enforcement is tracking Americans' cell phones in real time - without
the benefit of a warrant. Amid all the furor over the Bush
administration's warrantless wiretapping program a few years ago, a
mini-revolt was brewing over another type of federal snooping that was
getting no public attention at all."
"The prosecutors said
they needed the records to trace the movements of suspected drug
traffickers, human smugglers, even corrupt public officials. But many
federal magistrates - whose job is to sign off on search warrants and
handle other routine court duties - were spooked by the requests. Some
in New York, Pennsylvania, and Texas balked," he wrote.
Stephen
W. Smith, a federal magistrate in Houston, said he "started asking the
U.S. Attorney's Office, 'What is the legal authority for this? What is
the legal standard for getting this information?'"
Two years
ago, a U.S. magistrate in Pittsburgh ruled that the data they were
seeking could easily be misused to collect information about sexual
liaisons and other matters of an "extremely personal" nature.
In
federal appeals court last week, a Justice Department lawyer urged the
judges to overturn the magistrate's ruling. They claimed the government
was seeking "routine business records."
But after one of the
judges said there were some governments, like Iran's, that would like
to use such records to identify political protesters, she asked whether
the "government can assure us" that the Justice Department would never
collect cell-phone data for this kind of use in the U.S.
The government lawyer grudgingly acknowledged that such data "could be used constitutionally."
- Posted in

29 Comments so far
Show All-"Civil liberties groups are asking the court to require that the government show probable cause before it can track your whereabouts."
Americans make me laugh!! Obama can torture you, that is now legal in the US according to your justice dept. Obama can shoot you, (oh yeah but only if you are "officialy designated an enemy combatant"...how do you you become one of those? simple, Obama gets to choose who is and who isn't one...
And now what is left of your legal community, the part that is not on the payroll of corporations...is asking Obama's courts "please sirs, please don't monitor our phones without probable cause"
I got an idea. Maybe if you vote Democrat again in the next election, but this time click your ruby slippers together as you do it, the results will be different?
jlocke123
"Americans make me laugh!!"
At least we are good for something. :)
The reports of our demise and our guilt around the world are both exaggerated. Take heart, we may kick Uncle's butt yet and I don't believe the democrats will get too many votes for quite a while.
There should be more comments like this-- there used to be!
Speaking of change......
· Yr Obd't Servant
Let's face it. A nation that is prepared to torture its captives will legalize ANYTHING under the all-encompassing rubric of "homeland security" and justified on the basis of worst case scenarios.
Please line up for your chip implant. In this case, the "health care" procedure will be on the house. And please remember, there's nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide. Privacy is an right reserved exclusively for the transactions of corporate persons.
Gee RV, you stole my line! But we could be right. We micro-chip dogs in my country so they can be traced so why not humans?
Better still, why not compulsory lobotomies? That way we'd be really easy to control.
www.dangerouscreation.com
I have to ask: Why is the government moving so very fast to invade our privacy?
It could be that a coupe is really in the works. Before a battle, the attacking group must maneuver into positions that will be advantageous when the active attack is commenced.
This may be the moves before the takeover of the nation by the MIC.
Could it be that an attack on Iran is not far off?
Its unconstitutional and it won't stand.
Speaking of change......
Unconstitutional? You mean that "supreme law" scrap of parchment thingy?
Thats the one. The one that your entire freedom is based upon. The thing that keeps you from living like you were in Burma or Saudi Arabia. The thing thats been increasingly ignored by the Federal government since Lincoln.
The "thingy" thats going to save our bacon.
Yet another reason not to own a cell phone.
"one of the judges said there were some governments, like Iran's (OR A FASCIST STATE LIKE THE USA), that would like to use such records to identify political protesters"
This sounds like America's filthy rich Facsist Elete might be worried that the other 99% will wake up and want their money back.
Consider also your cell phone can be used as a microphone by Authorities, some even when turned off
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1029_3-6140191.html
So they are tracking your movements with GPS. archiving all digital data streams (all your cellphone calls) listening and recording room sounds to whoever they please whenever they want
This problem is Global
http://www.indect-project.eu/
"Consider also your cell phone can be used as a microphone by Authorities, some even when turned off "
That reminds me "V" is due to start again next month on ABC. But in reality the overlords are extraterrestrial aliens, at least I don't think so.
>>Nextel and Samsung handsets and the Motorola Razr are especially vulnerable to software downloads that activate their microphones,<<
Some cell phones make it difficult to pop the battery, Something to consider when buying a new one. I don't believe the older non GPS phones, like mine, cannot be trianglulaed to more than a few hundred feet, but that's enough to know generally where you are at.
Leave yoor phone at home when doing naughty deeds is the best solution, or cover up the mike -- would a folding phone diminish the sound enough I wonder?
Gary
"The bathtub was invented in 1850 and the telephone in 1875. In other words, if you had been living in 1850, you could have sat in the bathtub for 25 years without having to answer the phone."
-- Bill DeWitt, 1972
"One who does not wish to disclose his movements to the government need not use a cellular telephone."
Forcing Americans to give up their cell phones will interfere in commerce - an act of terrorism already established by Congress.
if interfere with commerce has been deemed an act of terrorism by Congress, then most of wall street would be guilty. So, in fact, whatever Congress has 'deemed' as an act of terrorism is highly selective at best. Just saying, not debating.
So, either pop the battery when you want some privacy or just
leave you "official" phone at home and travel with a throwaway
and a prepaid card you bought for cash. Where's the problem??
They can easily link that throwaway to your regular phone and then have that GPSed
MEANWHILE IN THE CONGO:
The War The World Forgot
A journey into the most savage war in the world
My travels in the Democratic Vacuum of Congo
This is the story of the deadliest war since Adolf Hitler’s armies marched across Europe. It is a war that has not ended. But is also the story of a trail of blood that leads directly to you: to your remote control, to your mobile phone, to your laptop and to your diamond necklace. In the TV series ‘Lost’, a group of plane crash survivors believe they are stranded alone on a desert island, until one day they discover a dense metal cable leading out into the ocean and the world beyond. The Democratic Republic of Congo is full of those cables, mysterious connections that show how a seemingly isolated tribal war is in reality something very different.
This war has been waved aside as an internal African implosion. In reality it a battle for coltan and diamonds and cassiterite and gold, destined for sale in London and New York and Paris. It is a battle for the metals that make our technological society vibrate and ring and bling, and it has already claimed four million lives in five years and broken a population the size of Britain’s. No, this is not only a story about them. This – the tale of a short journey into the long Congolese war we in the West have fostered, fuelled and funded – is a story about you.
http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=863
Cellphones fuel Congo conflict
Cellphones may have revolutionized the way we communicate, but in Central Africa their biggest legacy is war.
Nearly 3 million people have died in Congo in a four-year war over coltan, a heat-resistant mineral ore widely used in cellphones, laptops and playstations. Eighty percent of the world's coltan reserves are in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The mountainous jungle area where the coltan is mined is the battleground of what has been grimly dubbed "Africa's first World War," pitting Congolese forces against those of six neighbouring countries and numerous armed factions.
The victims are mostly civilians. Starvation and disease have killed hundreds of thousands and the fighting has displaced 2 million people from their homes.
Often dismissed as an ethnic war, the conflict is really over natural resources sought by foreign corporations -- diamonds, tin, copper, gold, but mostly coltan.
At stake for the multitude of heavily armed militias and governments is a cut of the high-tech boom of the 1990s, which sent the price of coltan skyrocketing to peak at US$400 per kilo. Coltan -- short for colombo-tantalite -- is refined into tantalum, a "magic powder" essential to many electronic devices.
The war started in 1998 when Congolese rebel forces, backed by Rwanda and Uganda, seized eastern Congo and moved into strategic mining areas, attacking villages along the way.
http://www.seeingisbelieving.ca/cell/kinshasa/
________________________________________________________________________________
It is a war for coltan. It is a massacre for technology. It is impossible for me to get anyone's attention on this. I have tried on discussion board's, leafletting, tabling and people just look away.
Noone wants to face the reality of how their daily habits fuel the slaughterhouse.
Who is calling you all the time, all day all night?
It is me calling you oh techno-man of the West wondering why you come to kill me. Why do you seem to think the thunder in my ground is for you to steal? Why do you think my life of fourteen-year-old prostitution-death-by-twenty is here to serve your need to know where you are all the time when you never know where you are any of the time? Is this okay for you to force me into servitude for your colonial consumerism? I know its long distance and collect but really who is paying the price here?
In a most fascinating letter exchange between social prophets of the 1930's and 1940's,
The author of "Brave New World" where the gov drugs and propagandas everyone to death, using sex and chemicals as rewards, argues with George Orwell, the author of "1984" where the gov tortures and watches it's citizens on the telescreen for any sign of resistance.
Aldous Huxley: "It was very kind of you to tell your publishers to send me a copy of your book...The philosophy of the ruling minority in 'Nineteen Eighty-Four' is a sadism which has been carried to its logical conclusion by going beyond sex and denying it. Whether in actual fact the policy of the boot-on-the-face can go on indefinitely seems doubtful. My own belief is that the ruling oligarchy will find less arduous and wasteful ways of governing and of satisfying its lust for power, and these ways will resemble those which I described in 'Brave New World'... the lust for power can be just as completely satisfied by suggesting people into loving their servitude as by flogging and kicking them into obedience..."
- Lettters of Aldous Huxley, edited by Grover Smith, Harper & Row, 1969
Scary stuff. Each day in our Brave New World of totalitarian government, we get closer and closer to the 1984-type torture of citizens by the government for perceived or suspected risks of insurrection.
Thanks Izr for the links. So, the movie "Enemy of the State" is not fiction, after all! I had speculated a long time ago that a NSA phone/computer ROM chip soldered on to the motherboard was completely technically possible and now you've verified it. Ever notice the senators who are considered out of line, are discovered in sex text scandals and the like? This elite minority is too powerful by half. Especially the Bush-CIA crime family.
Well, let's give them something to listen to. Spam, spam, spam, spam spam.... bla, bla, bla, all day long, bad singing, and really bad poetry..... I think I'll recite the Bill of Rights into my phone once a day, especially the forth amendment and First Justice John Marshal's ruling that any law that violates the Constitution is null and void on it's face. This means 90 percent of all the state and federal laws on the books today are void, and all the laws passed by the bushmonkey administration are void.
Phuck em.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
It was only a matter of tme - and it may have been planned that way all along. The corporate lords are way ahead of us in their thinking.
Maybe we're still lucky those things haven't been implanted yet, at birth. Not universally anyway.
Yet.
Point me to the Reservation, please.
Does anyone have a company issued cell phone? Yep, they are tracking you and not just at work. Surprise, surprise.
ThomasJefferson: Even though my mother didn't see much worth in studying the Complete Works of William Shakespeare, I did it anyway.
So, I want a pass to the Savage Reservation. The Golden Country will do. I can stay right here if only they'll leave me alone.
I won't make the mistake John Savage makes by falling for Lenina. My mother never sang me "Streptocock-Gee to Branbury-T." And without a television in my life for over 37 years, my mind isn't too much under their control. I guess the only telescreens in my home are my computers hooked up with Comcast. Bad enough with their cameras and microphones. Maybe when Murdoch starts charging more money for the internet I'll drop those off, too--of course after microwaving the hard drives, etc.
I'll just tend my own garden and throw occasional rocks over the electrified fence.
What a weird America we have become since 9/11!
Do you think the oligarchs will allow me to stay here? I ask this as I'm taking a break from filling out my income taxes, for days and nights now. They take my income and spend it for outrageous things, more than half for the U.S. military--which I despise.
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
I guess the oligarchs need to stamp out readers of Shakespeare along with those devotees of _On the Duty of Civil Disobedience_ who keep rereading the whole thing over and over.
Did you know the latter has been eradicated from public high schools in all 50 states? Even the title is gone from American literature texts and what remains of the 38-page essay is one page, eviscerated and emasculated as the heavily redacted speech and letter by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
And I have to keep paying these people!
dwyerj1,
Great post, and good questions.
I think the short answer is no. I don't believe there have been too many free humans on this planet, who haven't had to fight in some manner, at some time, to preserve their freedom. I was lucky in my generation as part of a fairly-prosperous middle class that compared to today, had it pretty good. But that appears to be gone now. Freedom is only for the rich now, and they are not even ten percent of the population.
The ruling oligarchs, who have morphed into organized crime, have converted the US into an subservient colony of no substance, from what I can discern.
We must realize that we are no different from the exploited colonists of 1770's in North America, except that in our situation, we are minus the vast resources and a pair of Oceans to protect us with. We also aren't dealing with an enlightened government like they were, which was embracing science, and liberty as called out in the "Rights of Englishmen" and as explored by the Royal Society (of Science.)
The revolution of 1776 was caused by enforcement of the Navigation Acts which taxed everything coming into America, and dictated that everything imported (which was most household items) had to be funneled through their monopoly: The British East India Company (their Walmart). Just like today, that taxation was levied by King George to pay for his wars of conquest; the real first world war: "The Seven Years War" or "The French and Indian War" of the 1750's as it was known in the colonies.
In our own time, the similarities are striking. Our liberties have all but been destroyed by a Gluttonous House of Lords (Congress). Our peace and tranquility was also shattered by a dunce-like despot King George (son of a Monarch) who, the more people made fun of him, the more he felt he had to show what a iron-willed tyrant he could be to make up for a lack of intellect or leadership.
Will we right the country back to it's intended form of self-government under the Constitution? The odds are long and the path is uncertain, but I believe it is a journey worth taking. A true measure of a man or woman, is not taken at a time when things are going well, but rather taken at a time when things don't look so good.
And right now, things don't look so good.
I really hope I prove worthy and brave as a citizen of Democracy and a defender of the Constitution at the end of my life. Right now, "these are the times that try men's souls", as Thomas Paine the author of "Common Sense" so compellingly wrote to a nation of abused people of the 1700's. The decision to rebel was reached by local government, when it was pointed out by Ben Franklin in his address to the inhabitants of North America, that at the birth and immigration rate existing back at that point, North America would soon outnumber the citizens in the rest of the Empire.
I think that is what we have to start realizing. As citizens of the US we vastly outnumber our oppressors. Left and Right have to come together and realize that the argument for a weak central government needs to be made again. A concession to the right, to be sure. But that's what glued the thirteen different colonies together in 1775. Ben Franklin's quote that:
"We must all hang together, or we will most certainly all hang separately."
Don't give up the faith babe,
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
The irony again...Americans want what they want and aren't willing to let others have it too. Americans are still duped by the two party ruling class, both flaming assholes; duped by the MSM of bull shit and lies, and duped into sitting in front of their computers for 7 hours to see if Obummer will come clean with a decent health care system that is a freakin lie all the way around...and who the hell cares if someone can find you by tracking your cell phone...don't they have your home address !!! Throw the damn thing away if you are so paranoid, and get one of those throw away types. Trade with freinds...scheesh.
Honey pie, our right to privacy is guaranteed in the Constitution. YOU SHOULD CARE!
Obviously you haven't read the Patriot Act. The Constitution is on thinner ice than water. We will only change this mess with a Kucinich/Nader/Paul type president and congress. We can't change HS and Patriot Act with the current morons in office. Of course we have a right to privacy, etc, that's a given. But you CAN protect your own privacy by CYA and taking responsibility for your own stuff. Unless you are doing something illegal, why worry? Everybody is posting their entire life on line via f-bkmyspacetwittr so what exactly is the problem? Plus any ANY portable or cell phone is automatically available to anyone who wants to listen in, just have the right devices. There is no privacy, just gradations of it. Please stop expecting the government to do the right thing and protect your own world.