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- To: cypherpunks@toad.com
- Subject: LAW: Wireless interception
- From: System Operator <anagld!decode!system@uunet.UU.NET>
- Date: Mon, 08 Nov 93 09:36:53 EST
- Organization: American Cryptogram Association
-
- Fellow Cypherpunks,
-
- Here's a couple excerpts from this month's _Search and Seizure Bulletin_,
- relating to interception of telephone calls. The first reiterates
- that ECPA covers interception of cellular telephone calls, whether
- intentional or not, even by the authorities. The second repeats that
- there is no expectation of privacy with cordless telephones.
- Interesting reasoning here: "the reasonableness of a cordless telephone
- user's expectation of privacy depends on the specific technology
- involved."
-
- By that reasoning, does the use of the new 900 MHz digital telephones
- (i.e. the VTech Tropez, etc.) infer a greater expectation of privacy,
- even though they are still cordless telephones?
-
- Anyway, here they are:
-
- =======================================================================
-
- Interception of Call to Seized Cellular Telephone-- Language Barrier
- (Hawaii)
-
- United States v. Kim, 803 F.Supp. 352 (1992)
-
- Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents questioned
- two men who had bought one-way plane tickets with
- cash. One of the men was Kim, a man agents had caught
- with more than eight grams of methamphetamine a month
- earlier. During the first encounter Kim had cooperated with
- the police and signed a statement containing a "boiler plate"
- paragraph. The paragraph stated Kim had read and initialed
- the statement and agreed all corrections had been made and
- the statement was true and correct.
-
- During the second incident, Kim gave officers permission to a search him.
- Police found a cellular telephone and
- a large amount of cash. At this point, Kim was transferred
- to federal custody. Kim again gave a statement and a written
- summary, containing the same boiler plate paragraph, and
- was released.
-
- The DEA seized the cellular telephone under a statute
- which allowed forfeiture of equipment used to carry out drug
- deals. Two days after the telephone had been seized, an agent
- activated it to learn the number. Within the space of a few
- hours, two calls came in. The agent learned from the second
- caller a "deliveryman'' was arriving that day and needed
- to know which hotel to go to.
-
- The agents knew Kim was staying at the Outrigger Phoenix
- Hotel. Agents went to the hotel room, knocked on the door,
- identified themselves, and threatened to "bust it down."
- Kim was ill and sleeping inside. Menchavez was staying
- with him. She tried to wake Kim when the police knocked,
- but was barely able to rouse him. She opened the door and,
- confronted by four agents with guns drawn, stepped back
- to allow them in.
-
- The agents lifted the naked Kim out of bed, slapped him,
- slammed him against the wall, and shouted at him. A search
- of the immediate area revealed $85,000 in cash. After the
- cash was discovered, Kim was given a consent to search form,
- which he signed. A further search uncovered 348 grams of
- methamphetamine. Kim was arrested and signed a third state-
- ment the following day.
-
- Kim asked the court to suppress his written statements,
- evidence seized during his initial encounter with the DEA
- and from his car, and all evidence seized as a result of the
- intercepted cellular telephone call.
-
- DECISION: The three statements and all evidence obtained
- as a result of the telephone call interception were suppressed.
- Drugs seized during first encounter were admissible.
-
- The court said cellular telephone calls are protected under
- the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, just as
- standard telephone calls are, and cannot be intercepted with-
- out a warrant. Accordingly, the DEA agent's interception of
- the call to Kim -- although unplanned-- was illegal and
- all evidence seized as a result of the interception remained
- inadmissible.
-
- Even if the interception had been legal, the evidence would
- have been suppressed because 1) Menchavez did not give
- the agents permission to enter the hotel room--she stepped
- back from the door because agents had threaten to push it
- down and had weapons drawn; and 2) Kim, being sick, naked,
- and abused, did not voluntarily consent to a search of the
- hotel room. Because the entry and search were illegal, Kim's
- statement made the following day was inadmissible against
- him.
-
- Kim's first two written statements were suppressed. Given
- Kim's first language was Korean and evidence showed he
- had a limited understanding of the boiler plate paragraph,
- it could not be proved the statements were accurate.
- The methamphetamine taken from Kim during the DEA's
- first encounter with Kim was admissible. Kim consented to
- the search of his pockets.
-
- United States v. Gallo, 659 F.2d 110 (1981).
-
- =============================================================
-
- Expectation of Privacy
-
- Cordless Telephone Conversations Monitored Without Warrant
- (Texas)
-
- United States v. Smith, 978 F.2d 171 (1992)
-
- Varing believed his next door neighbor, Smith, had burglarized
- his house. Varing used a scanner to monitor Smith's
- cordless telephone conversations. When Varing overheard
- Smith discussing drug deals, Varing contacted police. The
- police asked Varing to tape the conversations, provided cas-
- sette tapes, and were present during some of the monitoring.
- No warrant was obtained.
-
- As a result of the monitoring, Smith was arrested and
- charged with narcotics offenses. Smith argued the warrantless
- monitoring and recording of his telephone conversations vio-
- lated his Fourth Amendment rights and the Omnibus Crime
- and Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 (Wire Statute). He
- was convicted and appealed.
-
- DECISION: Affirmed.
-
- Smith failed to produce evidence he reasonably expected
- his cordless telephone conversations would remain private.
- A violation of the Fourth Amendment occurs when government
- activity significantly intrudes on a person's reasonable
- expectation of privacy. Depending on the particular
- technology involved, it may or may not be reasonable for
- a cordless telephone user to expect his or her conversation
- will remain private. Early cordless telephones transmitted to
- commercial radio frequencies and conversations could be
- overheard inadvertently; some new cordless telephones cannot
- be monitored without very sophisticated equipment. Accordingly,
- the reasonableness of a cordless telephone user's expectation
- of privacy depends on the specific technology involved.
- Smith failed to offer any evidence that his belief his conversations
- would remain private was reasonable.
-
- The Wire Statute explicitly excludes cordless telephones
- from its scope.
-
- =====================================================================
-
- _Search and Seizure Bulletin_ is published monthly by Quinlan Publishing
- Company, 23 Drydock Avenue, Boston, MA, 02210-2387. ISSN 0037-0193.
-
- I am operating under the assumption that relating these excerpts
- is covered under the fair use doctrine. Also, I have no connection
- with Quinlan Publishing Company other than as a satisfied customer.
-
-
- Dan
-
-
- --
- system@decode.UUCP (System Operator)
- Cryptography, Security, Privacy BBS +1 410 730 6734 Data/FAX
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