COMPUTER ELECTRONIC MAIL AND PRIVACY
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INTRODUCTION
Two years ago, legislation was introduced into Congress that sought to
provide federal statutory guidelines for privacy protection of computer
communications, such as electronic mail found on commercial computer systems
and on remote computer systems, commonly known as bulletin board systems
(BBS). Old federal wiretap law only gave protection to normal audio
telephonic communications. There was no contemplation of computers or their
operators using telephone lines to communicate. The old federal wiretap law
regulated police interceptions of communications while they are being
transmitted on a telephone line. Before the Electronic Communications
Privacy Act of 1976, the law did not provide guidelines for protecting the
transmitted message once it was stored within a computer system.
QUESTIONS
(1) Whether electronic mail and other intended private material stored
within an electronic computer communication system have Fourth Amendment
privacy protection?
(2) Should private electronic mail and other such material be accorded
the protection guidelines as with telephone communication and the U.S. Mail?
PROBLEM
Law enforcement seeks criminal evidence stored as E-Mail on either a
local, user-supported BBS, or on a commercial computer service, such as
CompuServe, GEnie or The Source. (Note, this situation is equally
applicable to personal, private data stored on a remote system for later
retrieval, as with CompuServe's online disk storage capabilities.)
For instance, a computer user calls up a computer communication system.
Using the electronic mail function, he leaves a private message that can
only be read by an intended recipient. The message is to inform the
recipient of a conspiracy plan to violate a federal or state criminal
statute. Law enforcement gets a tip about the criminal activity and learn
that incriminating evidence may be found on the computer system.
In 1982, such a situation occurred. (Meeks, Brock, "Life at 300 Baud:
Crime on the BBS Network," Profiles, August, 1986, 12-13.) A Detroit
federal grand jury, investigating a million-dollar cocaine ring, issued a
subpoena ordering a commercial service, The Source, to hand over private
subscriber data files. The files were routinely backed up to guard against
system crashes. The grand jury was looking for evidence to show that the
cocaine ring was using The Source as communication base to send messages to
members of the ring. With such evidence, the grand jury could implicate or
indict those suspected to be a part of the cocaine ring. The Source refused
to obey the subpoena. The prosecution argued The Source could not
vicariously assert a subscriber's privacy rights. Constitutional rights are
personal and could only be asserted by the person whose rights are invaded.
Additionally, if the files containing messages were duplicated, any
reasonable expectation of privacy by users would be extinguished. A court
battle ensued. However, before a ruling could be made, the kingpin of the
cocaine ring entered a surprise guilty plea to federal drug trafficking
charges. The case against the Source was discontinued.
Publicly posted messages and other public material may be easily
retrieved by law enforcement. It is the private material, such as E-Mail,
that poses the problem.
Law enforcement's task is then to gather enough evidence to
substantiate a criminal case. Specifically, they would want the E-Mail, or
other private files, transmitted by suspected criminals. A computer
communications service, as keeper and transmitter of private electronic
messages, would not want to turn over the private data.
INADEQUACY OF OLD LAW
Brock Meeks of Profiles magazine noted that as of August, 1986, "no ...
protection exist[ed] for electronic communications. Any law enforcement
agency can, for example, confiscate a local BBS and examine all the message
traffic," including and private files and E-Mail. (Ibid.)
In the next section, case law will be examined and statutory law prior
to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (ECPA) will be noted.
Seemingly applicable statutes, as they stood, provided no guidelines for
privacy protection of electronic computer communication systems, such as
CompuServe, GEnie, and local, user-operated BBSs.
CASE LAW
There is little case law available on computer communications and
Fourth Amendment constitutional problems. (M.D. Scott, Computer Law, 9-9
(1984 & Special Update, August 1, 1984).) If not for the surprise
preemptive guilty plea, the above described Detroit case may have provided
guidance on computer communications and privacy issues.
Of the available cases, Scott noted those that primarily dealt with
financial information found in bank and consumer credit organization
computers. In U.S. v. Davey, 426 F.2d 842, 845 (2 Cir. 1970), the
government had the right to require the production of relevant information
wherever it may be lodged and regardless of the form in which it is kept and
the manner in which it may be retrieved, so long as it pays the reasonable
costs of retrieval. In a California case, Burrows v. Superior Court, 13
Cal. 3d 238, 243, 118 Cal. Rptr. 166, 169 (1974), a depositor was found to
have a reasonable expectation that a bank would maintain the confidentiality
of both those papers in check form originating from the depositor and the
depositor's bank statements and records of those same checks. However, in
U.S. v. Miller, 425 U.S. 435, 440 (1976), customer account records on a
banks' computer were held to not be private papers of the bank customer,
and, hence, there is no Fourth Amendment problem when they are subpoenaed
directly from the bank.
The computer data and information in these cases have more of a
business character in contrast to personal E-Mail found on remote computer
systems such as CompuServe or a local BBS. Under the old law, a prosecutor,
as in the Detroit case, may try to analogize duplicated and backed up E-Mail
to business situations where data on business computer databases are also
backed up. Both types of computer data are stored on a system and then
later retrieved. The provider of the remote computing service or the sysop
would counterargue that the nature of computers always require the
duplication and backup of any computer data, whether the data files are E-
Mail or centrally-based financial or credit data. Duplication does not
necessarily make E-Mail the same as financial or credit data stored in
business computers. Centrally-based business information is more concerned
with the data processing. That information is generally stored and
retrieved by the same operator. E-Mail is more concerned with personal
communications between individuals where the sender transmits a private
message to be retrieved only by an intended recipient. The sender and the
recipient have subjective expectations of privacy that when viewed
objectively is reasonable. Therefore, there is a constitutionally protected
expectation of privacy under Katz v. U.S., 389 U.S. 347, 19 L.Ed. 88 S.Ct.
507 (1967). However, the prosecution would note under California v.
Ciraolo, -- U.S. --, 106 S.Ct. 1809 (1984), the users would have to protect
their electronic mail from any privacy intrusion. The provider or operator
of the remote system has ultimate control of his system. He has complete
access to all areas of the system. He could easily examine the material.
The prosecution would note the user could not reasonably protect his private
data from provider or operator invasion. This "knot-hole" would exclude any
idea of privacy. If there is no privacy, there can be no search and
therefore no Fourth Amendment constitutional violation. Law enforcement can
retrieve the material.
FEDERAL WIRETAP STATUTES
The federal wiretap statutes, before the Electronic Communication
Privacy Act of 1986, protected oral telephone communications from police
interceptions. This protection was made in 1968 in response to electronic
eavesdropping by government. (Cohodas, Nadine, "Congress Races to stay
Ahead of Technology," Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, May 31, 1986,
1235.) Although E-Mail appears to come under the statute's definition of
"wire communication," under the old law, it was limited to audio
transmissions by wire or cable and does not mention stored computer data.
(18 U.S.C. sec. 2510(1).) The old law required that an interception of a
wire communication be an aural acquisition of the communication. (18 U.S.C.
sec. 2510(4).) Being "aural," the communication must be "heard."
Therefore, a computer communication may come under the old law while being
transmitted. After a caller's message is "sent" on a remote computer
system, the message is then stored within the computer's system. The
communication's conversion into computer stored data, thus no longer in
transmission until retrieved, takes the communication out of the old
statutory protection.
"Eighteen years ago ... Congress could not appreciate - or in some
cases even contemplate - [today's] telecommunications and computer
technology...." (132 Cong. Rec. S7992 (daily ed. June 19, 1986) (statement
of Sen. Leahy).)
CALIFORNIA'S INVASION OF PRIVACY AND WIRETAP STATUTE
California's "invasion of privacy" and wiretap statutes (Cal. Penal
Code sec. 630 et seq.), appears to provide state protection for BBSs.
California Penal Code sec. 637 reads as:
Every person not a party to a telegraphic or telephonic
communication who willfully discloses the contents of a
telegraphic or telephonic message, or any part thereof, addressed
to another person, without the permission of such person, unless
directed so to do by the lawful order of a court, is punishable
by imprisonment in the state prison, or in the count jail not
exceeding one year, or by fine not exceeding five thousand
dollars ($5000), or by both fine and imprisonment.
Again, the question here would be whether "telegraphic or telephonic
messages" include computer communications via modem where a transmitted
message is subsequently stored within a computer awaiting retrieval by its
intended recipient. Again, the storage of the data takes the computer
communications out of the statute. When the statute was passed, the
California legislature, much like the Congress, could not foresee the
technological advances in computer communications.
It should be noted that Assemblywoman Moore introduced legislation in
1985 that would amend have the California state constitution to explicitly
provide state constitutional privacy protection for remote computing
services and their stored information. However, nothing has come out of
this. Aside from political reasons for the lack of further action is one
possible legal consequential argument against the amendment may be if
computer privacy protection is specified in the state constitution, more
litigation may result to tie up the courts in cases deciding whether or not
there is privacy protection for other unspecified matters. Although,
overall, the California state constitution is much more specific than the
United States Constitution, it may be best to not be any more specific with
regard to privacy.
PROTECTION FOR U.S. MAIL
Statutory U.S. Mail protection provides a suggestion for statutory
provisions of privacy protection for E-Mail deposited in electronic
communication systems. The unauthorized taking out of and examining of the
contents of mail held in a "depository for mail matter" before it is
delivered to the mail's intended recipient is punishable by fine,
imprisonment, or both. (18 U.S.C. sec. 1702.)
SOLUTION - THE NEW LAW
There are two methods towards a solution: (1) court decisions; and (2)
new legislated privacy protection.
COURT DECISIONS
Courts may have chosen to read computer communications protection into
the old federal wiretap statute or into existing state law. However, they
were reluctant to do so. Courts "are in no hurry to [revise or make new law
in this area] and some judges are openly asking Congress for help....
[F]ederal Appeals Court Judge Richard Posner in Chicago said Congress needed
to revise current law, adding that 'judges are not authorized to amend
statutes even to bring them up-to-date.'" (Cohodas, Nadine, "Congress Races
to Stay Ahead of Technology," Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, May 31,
1986, p. 1233.)
NEW STATUTE
Last October 21, 1986, President Reagan signed the Electronic
Communications Privacy Act of 1986 amending the federal wiretap law. The
new Act (P.L. 99-508) would not take immediate effect until three months
after the signing - presumably January 21, 1986. (18 U.S.C. secs. 111 and
202.)
When the new law does take effect, it would first provide privacy
protection for any
'electronic communication' ... [by] any transfer of signs,
signals, writing, images, sounds, data or intelligence of any
nature transmitted in whole or in part by a wire, radio,
electromagnetic, photoelectronic or photooptical system that
affects interstate or foreign commerce...."
(18 U.S.C. sec. 2510(10).)
Second, and more importantly for this discussion, ECPA would protect
"stored wire and electronic communications," i.e. E-Mail stored and backed
up on disk or tape on an electronic computer communication system. (18
U.S.C. sec. 2701(a)(1) and (2).) The legislation makes it a federal
criminal offense to break into any electronic system holding copies of
messages or to exceed authorized access to alter or obtain the stored
messages. (Ibid.)
The legislation would protect electronic computer communication systems
from law enforcement invasion of user E-Mail without a court order. (18
U.S.C. sec. 2703.) Although the burden of preventing invasion of the E-Mail
is placed on the subscriber or user of the system, the government must give
him notice allowing him fourteen days to file a motion to quash a subpoena
or to vacate a court order seeking disclosure of his computer data. (18
U.S.C. sec. 2704(b).) However, the government may give delayed notice when
there are exigent circumstances as listed by the Act (18 U.S.C. sec. 2705.)
The legislation gives a civil cause of action to the provider or
operator, subscriber, customer or user of the system aggrieved by an
invasion of private material stored in the system in violation of ECPA. (18
U.S.C. sec. 2702; see also 18 U.S.C. sec. 2520.) If the provider or
operator has to disclose information stored on his system due to a court
order, warrant, subpoena, or certification under ECPA, there can be no cause
of action against him by any person aggrieved by such disclosure. (18
U.S.C. sec. 2703(e); see also sec. 2702(b).)
The electronic communications, under this new Act, must be sent by a
system that "affects interstate or foreign commerce." (18 U.S.C. sec.
2510(12).) The "electronic communications" may practically be limited to
electronic communications sent by common carrier telephone lines.
There may be some question as to whether or not ECPA is confined to
commercial systems and does not cover user-operated bulletin board systems.
That would be similar to arguing the old federal wiretap law was confined to
long distance communications and not to local telephone calls. The House
report (H.R. No. 647, 99th Cong. (1986)), indicates user-operated BBSs are
intended to be covered by the Act. The House noted a difference between
commercial subscription systems and user-operated BBSs readily accessible by
the public. However, it also noted the different levels of security found
on user-operated BBSs, i.e. the difference between system areas containing
private electronic mail and other areas containing public information.
Electronic communications that the operator attempts to keep confidential
would be protected by ECPA, while there would be no liability for access to
features configured to be readily accessible by the general public.
Language in the Act also refers to "the person or entity providing the wire
or electronic communication service." Such language may be seen to indicate
the inclusion of individuals who operate a BBS. (18 U.S. secs. 2701(c)(1)
and 2702(a)(1) and (b).) Additionally, a remote computing service was
defined in the Act as an electronic communications system that provides
computer storage or processing services to the public. (18 U.S.C. sec.
2710(2).) This would certainly be applicable to a user-operated BBS that
is easily accessible to public with the simple dialing of a telephone number
by a modem-equipped computer. On the political side, Senator Leahy, a
principal sponsor of the Act was reported to have been "soliciting [users
and operators' of BBSs] comments and encourage sensitivity to the needs of
BBS's in the legislation.... They are ... willing to listen to our side of
things." (BBSLAW02.MSG, dated 07/24/85, information from Chip Berlet,
Secretary, National Lawyers Guild Civil Liberties Committee, transmitted by
Paul Bernstein, SYSOP, LAW MUG, Chicago, Illinois 312/280-8180, regarding
Federal Legislation Affecting Computer Bulletin Boards, deposited on The
Legacy Network 213/553-1473.)
CONCLUSION
Electronic mail stored on computer communication systems have Fourth
Amendment constitutional privacy protection. Unfortunately, before the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, such protection was not
articulated by federal or state statutory guidelines. Case law also did
not provide any helpful guidance. The peculiarities of computers and
computer storage posed problems which were not addressed by the old wiretap
laws. They were also problems overwhelmed by constitutional privacy law as
defined by the United States Supreme Court. A legislative solution was
required and was provided for by ECPA.
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