From the same set of “judges”
that said the government can attach GPS transponders to
automobiles without warrants to track “people of
interest.” It took the Supremes to rescind that one.
According to this, if you let
anyone into your house, even if you do not know they are
a government agent, you are risking a government search
without a warrant. Talk about taking a tip from the old
KGB and NKVD in the Soviet Union.
Welcome to America, land of the
free and the home of the brave.
Ninth Circuit Gives the A-OK For
Warrantless Home Video Surveillance
By Hanni Fakhoury
November 30, 2012 "Information Clearing House" Can law enforcement enter your house and use a secret video camera to record the intimate details inside? On Tuesday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals unfortunately answered that question with "yes."
By Hanni Fakhoury
November 30, 2012 "Information Clearing House" Can law enforcement enter your house and use a secret video camera to record the intimate details inside? On Tuesday, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals unfortunately answered that question with "yes."
U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents
suspected Ricky Wahchumwah
of selling bald and gold eagle feathers and
pelts in violation of federal law. Equipped
with a small hidden video camera on his
clothes, a Wildlife agent went to Wahchumwah's
house and feigned interest in buying feathers
and pelts. Unsurprisingly, the agent did not
have a search warrant. Wahchumwah moved to suppress
the video as an unreasonable search under the
Fourth Amendment, but the trial court denied his motion.
On appeal before the Ninth Circuit, we filed
an amicus brief in
support of Wahchumwah. We highlighted the
Supreme Court's January 2012 decision in United States v. Jones
-- which held that law enforcement's
installation of a GPS device onto a car was a
"search" under the Fourth Amendment -- and
specifically focused on the concurring
opinions of Justices Alito and Sotomayor, who
were worried about the power of technology to
eradicate privacy.
In our brief we argued that
although a person may reveal small bits of
information publicly or to a house guest,
technology that allows the government to
aggregate that data in ways that were
impractical in the past means that greater
judicial supervision and oversight is
necessary. After all, a video camera can
capture far more detail than the human eye and
is specifically designed to allow the
government to record, save and review details
for another day, bypassing the human mind's
tendency to forget. That means police need a
search warrant to engage in the type of
invasive surveillance they did in Wahchumwah's
house.
Unconvinced, the Ninth Circuit
instead relied on a case from 1966, Hoffa v. United States,
ruling that Wahchumwah forfeited his privacy
interest when he "voluntarily" revealed the
interior of his home to the undercover agent.
But its conclusion contradicts not only the
Supreme Court's decision in Jones,
but also earlier Ninth Circuit caselaw as
well.
In Jones, the Supreme Court
made clear that a law enforcement trespass
onto private property for the purpose of
obtaining information was a "search" under the
Fourth Amendment. Under common law, a
defendant was not liable for trespass if their
entry was authorized. But the Ninth Circuit
previously made clear in Theofel v. Farey-Jones
that a person's consent to a trespass is
ineffective if they're "mistaken as to the
nature and quality of the invasion intended."
In fact, Theofel cited another Ninth
Circuit case where the court found a "police
officer who, invited into a home, conceals a
recording device for the media" to be a
trespasser.
What that means here is that when the
undercover agent concealed his identity and
purpose, making Wahchumwah "mistaken as to the
nature and quality" of the home visit, the
government trespassed onto Wahchumwah's
property. Since that trespass was done for the
purpose of obtaining information -- to get
evidence of bald and gold eagle feather and
pelt sales -- the government "searched"
Wahchumwah's home. And it needed a warrant to
do that; without one, the search was
unconstitutional.
Its troubling that the Ninth Circuit
did not see it this way (nor are they the only one).
Because the sad truth is that as technology
continues to advance, surveillance becomes
"voluntary" only by virtue of the fact we live
in a modern society where technology is
becoming cheaper, easier and more invasive.
The Wahchumwah case exemplifies this: on
suspicion of nothing more than the benign
misdemeanor of selling eagle feathers, the
government got to intrude inside the home and
record every intimate detail it could: books
on a shelf, letters on a coffee table,
pictures on a wall. And we're entering an age
where criminal suspicion is no longer even
necessary. Whether you're calling a friend's
stolen cell phone and landing on the NYPD
massive database of call logs,
driving into one of the increasing number of
cities using license plate scanners to
record who comes in or out, or walking
somewhere close to hovering drones,
innocent people are running the risk of having
their personal details stored in criminal
databases for years to come.
The only way to avoid pervasive law
enforcement monitoring shouldn't be to make
the choice to live under a rock in the
wilderness somewhere. Instead, the Fourth
Amendment means today what it meant in 1787:
that the "right of the people to be secure in
their persons, houses, papers, and effects"
shouldn't be violated unless the government
comes back with a warrant.
This
article was originally posted at Electronic
Frontier Foundation
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