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- ------------------------------
-
- From: EFF (eff@well.sf.ca.us)
- Subject: EFF/SJG Sue Bill Cook, Tim Foley, Secret Service, et. al.
- Date: 1 May, 1991
-
- ********************************************************************
- *** CuD #3.15: File 3 of 3: EFF/SJG SUE COOK, FOLEY ET. AL. ***
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-
- {The following came in just minutes before we began sending out this
- issue of CuD. We reduced the original to just a few lines. The full
- text can be obtained from EFF (eff@well.sf.ca.us) or from the CuD
- archives}.
-
- Excerpted From: EFFector Online #1.04 (May 1, 1991)
-
- The following press release was Faxcast to over 1,500 media
- organizations and interested parties this afternoon:
-
- EXTENDING THE CONSTITUTION TO AMERICAN CYBERSPACE:
-
- TO ESTABLISH CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTION FOR ELECTRONIC MEDIA AND TO
- OBTAIN REDRESS FOR AN UNLAWFUL SEARCH, SEIZURE, AND PRIOR RESTRAINT
- ON PUBLICATION, STEVE JACKSON GAMES AND THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER
- FOUNDATION TODAY FILED A CIVIL SUIT AGAINST THE UNITED STATES SECRET
- SERVICE AND OTHERS.
-
- On March 1, 1990, the United States Secret Service nearly
- destroyed Steve Jackson Games (SJG), an award-winning publishing
- business in Austin, Texas.
- In an early morning raid with an unlawful and
- unconstitutional warrant, agents of the Secret Service conducted a
- search of the SJG office. When they left they took a manuscript
- being prepared for publication, private electronic mail, and several
- computers, including the hardware and software of the SJG Computer
- Bulletin Board System. Yet Jackson and his business were not only
- innocent of any crime, but never suspects in the first place. The
- raid had been staged on the unfounded suspicion that somewhere in
- Jackson's office there "might be" a document compromising the
- security of the 911 telephone system.
- In the months that followed,
- Jackson saw the business he had built up over many years dragged to
- the edge of bankruptcy. SJG was a successful and prestigious
- publisher of books and other materials used in adventure role-playing
- games. Jackson also operated a computer bulletin board system (BBS)
- to communicate with his customers and writers and obtain feedback and
- suggestions on new gaming ideas. The bulletin board was also the
- repository of private electronic mail belonging to several of its
- users. This private mail was seized in the raid. Despite repeated
- requests for the return of his manuscripts and equipment, the Secret
- Service has refused to comply fully.
- Today, more than a year after that raid, The Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, acting with SJG owner Steve Jackson, has filed
- a precedent setting civil suit against the
- United States Secret Service, Secret Service Agents Timothy Foley and
- Barbara Golden, Assistant United States Attorney William Cook, and
- Henry Kluepfel.
- "This is the most important case brought to date,"
- said EFF general counsel Mike Godwin, "to vindicate the
- Constitutional rights of the users of computer-based communications
- technology. It will establish the Constitutional dimension of
- electronic expression. It also will be one of the first cases that
- invokes the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act as a shield and
- not as a sword -- an act that guarantees users of this digital
- medium the same privacy protections enjoyed by those who use the
- telephone and the U.S. Mail."
-
- (remainder of text deleted)
-
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- **END OF CuD #3.15**
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