Feds: We will search through your laptop files at the border

Wed Apr 23, 2008 11:58AM EDT

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Following in the wake of February's news that customs agents were seizing electronics and making copies of all the files on cell phones and laptop hard drives, a federal appeals court has ruled on the legality of such searches. The result: Yeah, customs can do whatever it wants to your computer when you come across the border, without a warrant, and without cause.

The ruling extends to all electronics: In addition to laptops, feds can seize phone records and even digital pictures on your camera as they hunt for evidence. The ruling was unanimous among the three appellate judges.

Be assured that the ruling has little to do with thwarting terrorism. The appeal was actually part of an ongoing trial of a man named Michael Arnold, who returned from the Philippines and had his laptop scoured by the feds. They found purported images of child pornography on the laptop and later arrested him. In his trial, the evidence was suppressed for probable cause issues, as the court said that customs had no reasonable suspicion to search his laptop in the first place. That ruling has now been overturned.

As Wired notes, the court did not rule on whether you have to help agents access your hard drive. If you use a password or encryption, the court was mum on whether you can be compelled to provide information on bypassing that security in order to access materials on the drive. If you find yourself in such a situation and have anything on your computer that might be considered at all suspicious, you are probably wise to keep mum on providing login information.

This is an issue that will undoubtedly keep developing (and will probably be submitted, in the end, to the Supreme Court), but anyone traveling overseas with sensitive information (even confidential, legal stuff) should for now consider storing it elsewhere (online, perhaps) or simply leaving it at home. 

POLL: What do you think? 

Comments on Feds: We will search through your laptop files at the border

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  • 66 Posted by danielskempton on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    (not sure why there is a % for my comment so I will try this again) -- "disappared". How long is it before we loose our right to express our discontent. I am able to say, "I think that President Bush was wrong for ..." and there is nothing that anyone can do to me. However we are quickly becoming the "Nazi Germany" of the 21st Century. The issue is not whether or not I have anything to hide. The issue is that if we abandon our control and our right to privacy it sets, what is legally refered to as a precedent - such that it makes it easier to take away rights in the future; and we have already seen it. We are talking here about searches, of American Citizens on American Soil, that are invasive. It is no concern of the customs office, what pictures I have in my digital phone - unless they have resonable evidence that I have commited a crime for which they can get a warrant. Do we really want to allow Big Brother to movein to our home; to monitor every communication and tell us what we can and cannot think, watch, read, or say?

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