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- Computer underground Digest Sun Jan 09 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 04
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe (BEST WISHES, BK)
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Copy Relativist: Ayn Stine
-
- CONTENTS, #6.04 (Jan 09 1994)
- File 1--Re-cap of Tony Davis Oka Info Ex BBS Bust
- File 2--Brief/Motion to Dismiss in Tony Davis BBS Case
- File 3--Sources for more information on OIE/Tony Davis BBS
- File 4--Re: Ratings Servers and the Diversity of USENET (#1)
- File 5--Re: File 7--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #2
- File 6--Re: Ratings Servers and the Diversity of USENET (#2)
- File 7--Congressperson's Gopher in Arizona
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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- editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
- or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
- 60115.
-
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- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 09 Jan 1994 17:15:11 EST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
- Subject: File 1--Re-cap of Tony Davis Oka Info Ex BBS Bust
-
- Two files in this issue address the bust of Tony Davis, a BBS sysop in
- Oklahoma. Here, we reprint from CuD 5.81 an excerpt from Lance Rose's
- Boardwatch Column, which provides a summary of the case. The next
- article is the brief for a motion to dismiss in the case. The third
- post provides pointers for those who want more detailed information.
-
- Extracted from CuD 5.81:
-
- ================================================
- >From Boardwatch Magazine / September, 1993. Under the byline of
- Lance Rose:"BBS BURNINGS" in the Legally Online column, p. 62
- ================================================
-
- OKLAHOMA BBS RAIDED ON PORNOGRAPHY CHARGES
-
- The legal assault on bulletin boards continues this month with a raid
- by Oklahoma City Police Department Vice Division on Tony Davis's
- OKLAHOMA INFORMATION EXCHANGE BBS and his associated Mid-America
- Digital Publishing Company.
-
- About 4:00 PM on July 20, four officers of the Oklahoma City Police
- Department arrived at the offices of Mid-America Digital Publishing
- with a search warrant for "pornographic CD-ROMs." Davis was arrested
- on suspicion of the sale and distribution of pornographic CD-ROM
- disks. Of the 2000 CD ROM disks available on site, they confiscated
- about 50 disks, and an estimated $75,000 worth of equipment Davis runs
- his 10-line OKLAHOMA INFORMATION EXCHANGE BBS on. The equipment
- including two computers with gigabyte hard drives, two Pioneer 6-disk
- drives, four single CD ROM drives, 10 High Speed Hayes modems, Novell
- network software and associated hardware, etc.
-
- Apparently, an undercover agent had contacted Mid-America Digital
- Publishing on two occasions and purchased CD-ROM disks containing
- adult material from the company. At the raid, Davis cooperated with
- the police showing them whatever they wanted to see, and even removing
- four disks from CD-ROMS on the BBS machine and showing them to the
- police. Curiously, these were standard off-the-shelf CD ROM
- collections NOT published by Davis, including "Busty Babes", "For
- Adults Only #2," "For Adults Only #3", and "Storm II". More
- curiously, the police themselves put the disks BACK into the BBS in
- order to video tape callers accessing the files on the disks.
-
- ......
-
- Despite Davis' notification, none of the specific procedures required
- by federal law (Privacy Protection Act) when serving search warrants
- on publishers was followed, and no acknowledgement or even apparent
- cognizance of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act made when
- notified of the electronic mail for some 2000 BBS users available on
- the system. OKLAHOMA INFORMATION EXCHANGE carries some 750 FidoNet
- conferences, an additional 750 Usenet Newsgroups, and offers callers
- private FidoNet mail and Internet mail and actually hubs mail for
- other bulletin board systems as well.
-
- ......
-
- All possible charges relate to Oklahoma State statutes against
- obscenity. Located in the heart of the Bible Belt, this could be
- serious. A penalty of up to $5000 and 5 years in prison per infraction
- is possible. If you count each file on a CD-ROM as an infraction, Mr.
- Davis could in theory be facing over a 100,000 years in jail and
- nearly a $100 million in fines - another contrast between
- technological reality and our legal system. From what we understand,
- in Oklahoma, it is technically illegal to actually BE naked at any
- time when not actually getting wet somehow, and some legal theorists
- posit that HBO and Showtime cable television channels are actually
- infractions under the state laws as written.
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: BOARDWATCH Magazine, chalked full of information
- and news, can be obtained for $36/year (12 issues) from:
- Boardwatch Magazine / 8500 W. Bowles Ave. / Suite 210 / Littleton,
- CO 80123)).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 24 Dec 93 10:11:45 PST
- From: Tony.Davis@f1.n147.z1.fidonet.org (Tony Davis)
- Subject: File 2--Brief/Motion to Dismiss in Tony Davis BBS Case
-
- IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF OKLAHOMA COUNTY
- STATE OF OKLAHOMA
-
- STATE OF OKLAHOMA, ex rel., )
- ROBERT H. MACY, DISTRICT )
- ATTORNEY OF THE SEVENTH )
- PROSECUTORIAL DISTRICT, )
- )
- Plaintiff, )
- vs. ) Case No. CJ-93-6651
- )
- ONE (1) PIONEER CD-ROM CHANGER, )
- MDL. #DRM-600-A, SER# ML 8515021; )
- ONE (1) PIONEER CD-ROM CHANGER, )
- MDL. #DRM-600-A, SER# ML 8515077; )
- FOUR (4) SONY CD ROM DRIVES, MDL. )
- #CDU 6201-20, SER#'S 810593, 808759)
- 808986, & 806083; TWO (2) COMPUTER )
- POWER CONTROLS, NO MODEL OR SER. )
- NUMBER; ONE (1) KEYBOARD NMB TEC. )
- MDL. RTL01, SER# 19257111; ONE (1) )
- KEYBOARD MAXI SWITCH, MDL#2186002XX)
- SER #19257111; ONE (1) WOODS POWER )
- STRIP MDL# 417 NO SER.#; ONE (1) )
- LONALITE POWER STRIP, JDL# 417 NO )
- SER.#; ONE (1) BROOKS POWER STRIP )
- MD#T6-6 NO SER#; ONE (1) US )
- ROBOTICS MODEM, SER # )
- 0002670001732718, MDL#14400; ONE )
- (1) US ROBOTICS, SER # )
- 0081000000002753; ONE (1) HAYES )
- MODEM MDL #5100, SER#A00351003317; )
- ONE (1) ROBOTICTS 2400 MDL#UNKNOWN,)
- SER #0033-03068608; ONE (1) HAYES )
- MODEM MDL. #5100, SER#A00351003311;)
- ONE (1) DGI BOARD; ONE (1) MODEM )
- ROBOTICS SER# 0066-16045021020891; )
- ONE(1) HAYES MODEM SER#A00151003142)
- ONE(1) MONITOR HELM ENG. MDL # )
- CM-414E, SER #038213073; ONE )
- MIMMICOR MONITOR, MDL# MM1453M1, )
- SER#90405186; ONE (1) COMPUTER CUP,)
- W/DRIVES, NO SER# OR MDL#; ONE (1) )
- COMPUTER CPU W/DRIVES, NO SER# OR )
- MDOL#; )
- Defendants. )
-
-
- BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS
-
- COMES NOW, ANTHONY A. DAVIS, the owner of the above described
- property, and respectfully requests this Court dismiss the above
- entitled forfeiture action.
-
- PROPOSITION I
-
- THE PROPERTY WAS SEIZED PURSUANT TO AN
- UNAUTHORIZED AND WARRANTLESS SEARCH.
-
- On July 20, 1993, the Oklahoma City Police Department entered
- the business office of Anthony Davis at 1501 Southeast 66th Street,
- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, pursuant to a search warrant (See Exhibit
- "A"). By the time their search ended, they had dismantled and
- seized a network computer system, the pieces of which are the
- property listed herein. However, an examination of this search
- warrant and the affidavit requesting the warrant indicates that
- there was no mention of a computer network or computer bulletin
- board system. There were no exigent circumstances and no legal
- justification for the police officers' unilateral decision to
- expand the scope of the search warrant beyond that which was
- granted by the Judge.
-
- The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution tells
- us that warrants must particularly describe the place to be
- searched and the person or things to be seized. The United States
- Supreme Court has consistently articulated the position that a
- search warrant prevents the seizure of one thing under a warrant
- describing another. "As to what is to be taken, nothing is left to
- the discretion of the officer". Marron v. U.S., 48 S.Ct. 74
- (1927). To allow searching and seizing items beyond which is
- described in the warrant would allow warrants to become
- impermissibly general and thus violate the Fourth Amendment. See,
- Warden v. Hayden, 87 S.Ct. 1642 (1967), and Andresen v. Maryland,
- 96 S.Ct. 2737 (1976).
-
- Oklahoma case law mirrors the U.S. Supreme Court's concern for
- particularity in description of items to be seized. See, Tosh v.
- State, 736 P.2d 527 (1987), Coffey v. State, 661 P.2d 897 (1983),
- and Jones v. State, 632 P.2d 1249 (1981). Case law indicates that
- warrantless searches are per se unreasonable, subject only to a few
- specifically established and well delineated exceptions. Coolidge
- v. New Hampshire, 91 S.Ct. 2022 (1971). If the State is to rely on
- one of the specific well delineated exceptions allowing warrantless
- search and seizure, it is the State's burden to show the Court that
- such reliance is lawful.
-
- Under certain fact situations, such well delineated exceptions
- will not justify a warrantless search. This exception to a search
- outside of a warrant is disallowed in situations like the case at
- bar, as described in Coolidge:
-
- But where the discovery is anticipated, where the police
- know in advance the location of the evidence and intend
- to seize it, the situation is altogether different. The
- requirement of a warrant to seize imposes no
- inconvenience whatever, or at least none which is
- constitutionally cognizable in a legal system that
- regards warrantless searches as 'per se unreasonable' in
- the absence of 'exigent circumstances'. At page 2040.
-
- But to extend the scope of such an intrusion to the
- seizure of objects -- not contraband or stolen or
- dangerous in themselves -- which the police know in
- advance they will find in plain view and intend to seize,
- will fly in the face of the basic rule that no amount of
- probable cause can justify a warrantless seizure. At
- page 2041.
-
- Testimony at the preliminary hearing from the affiant,
- Sergeant Anthony Gracey, revealed that Gracey was specifically told
- by Anthony Davis several months before the search in question that
- Davis owned and operated a computer network where people could dial
- in and access the same type of discs Davis was selling to Sergeant
- Gracey. At the preliminary hearing, Gracey testified that after he
- bought an adult CD from Davis in June 1993, that the following
- conversation occurred:
-
- After I purchased the CD, we were setting there talking.
- After I had given him the money, I remained around for a while
- and he (Tony Davis) said 'you know I have the same type of CDs
- available -- or same type of programs available on the network
- that I have on that disc.' He said, 'come on over here and
- I'll show you the computer -- you know, my computer system, or
- I'll show you the CD.' (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at
- P.29).
-
- After revealing this information, Gracey was asked the
- following question:
-
- Q. Now of course networks mean a lot of different things
- to different people. Let me make sure I understand...You
- said that you took that to mean that he had a network
- where people could access or view these matters other
- than just himself. Was that the way you took it?
-
- A. (Gracey) Yes, sir. (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at
- P.29).
-
- Gracey later testified that Davis bragged to Gracey that he
- had the largest network in the state. When Gracey was asked what
- this meant, the following exchange occurred:
-
- Q. When he said he had the largest network in the state
- did you take that to mean that a lot of people could call
- in and look at whatever CDs he had?
-
- A. (Gracey) Yeah. (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at
- P.31).
-
- Despite the specific knowledge that Mr. Davis had a computer
- network which allowed persons to view allegedly pornographic disks
- like Sgt. Gracey purchased, Gracey made no mention of this fact to
- the Judge in his affidavit for search warrant.
-
- Sergeant Mark Wenthold of the Oklahoma City Police Department
- Vice Division was also on the scene and actively involved in the
- search of Anthony Davis' business. Sergeant Wenthold explained at
- the preliminary hearing that he too had knowledge of Sergeant
- Gracey's conversation with Anthony Davis concerning this computer
- network that was on the premises. In describing the search
- Wenthold stated:
-
- (We) went in one room and there was a large computer
- system set up, which we had discussed that he had a
- network system that he had talked about with Tony
- (Gracey) when he was making the buys. Tony (Gracey) had
- never seen the system. He had talked about it, so it
- really didn't surprise us when we found it, but of
- course, we couldn't describe this system in a warrant
- when we hadn't seen it yet. [Emphasis added.]
- (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at pp.65-66).
-
- The judge who issued the search warrant in question was not
- told of a computer network on the premises which might be used to
- transmit electronically those disks which the police had claimed
- were pornographic. A reading of the affidavit and the search
- warrant itself makes it clear that the police were only authorized
- to search for evidence relating to the crime of selling allegedly
- pornographic CD disks. The computer equipment seized and listed
- herein in no way related to the crimes of possession or sale of
- pornographic CD disks upon which the warrant was issued.
-
- PROPOSITION II
-
- ITEMS TAKEN PURSUANT TO AN ILLEGAL SEARCH AND
- SEIZURE CANNOT BE USED IN A CIVIL FORFEITURE
- PROCEEDING.
-
- Oklahoma law recognizes the principal that items which would
- be inadmissible in a criminal court pursuant to the exclusionary
- rule are likewise inadmissible in civil proceedings. The Oklahoma
- Supreme Court in the case of Turner v. City of Lawton, 733 P.2d,
- 375 (Okla. 1986), held as follows:
-
- Article II, Section 30 (of the Oklahoma Constitution),
- must be strictly construed, and unless it can clearly be
- shown that the officers making the search complied with
- the legal prerequisites necessary to constitute a lawful
- search, the evidence seized by an unreasonable search
- must be suppressed. The absolute security granted by the
- Oklahoma Constitution Article II, Section 30, against
- unlawful search and seizure exists without reference to
- the guilt or innocence of the person whose property is
- searched and without consideration of whether the
- proceeding is civil or criminal in nature.
-
- Article II, Section 30 of the Oklahoma Constitution is modeled
- after and precisely parallels the language in the Fourth Amendment
- of the United States Constitution. It states:
-
- The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
- houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches
- or seizures shall not be violated; and no warrant shall
- issue but upon probable cause supported by oath or
- affirmation, describing as particularly as may be the
- place to be searched and the person or thing to be
- seized.
-
- Although the Turner case did not involve a civil forfeiture
- proceeding, the holding in Turner indicates that illegally seized
- items are inadmissible in all civil proceedings.
-
- Case law throughout the United States supports the holding
- reached by Oklahoma's courts in the Turner case. Research by this
- attorney found seventeen states which reached the same conclusion
- as the reasoning in the Turner case. (See Pitts v. State of
- Georgia, 428 S.E.2d 650 (1993), Richardson v. $4,543.00 United
- States Currency, 814 P.2d 952 (Id. 1991), Eads v. Hill, 563 N.E.2d,
- 625 (In., 1990), Illinois v. 1968 Cadillac Automobile, 281 N.E.2d,
- 776 (1972), Parish of Jefferson v. Bayou Landing Limited, Inc., 350
- So.2d 158 (La., 1977), State of Maine vs. One Uzi Semi-automatic
- 9mm Gun, 589 A.2d 31 (1991), State of Missouri v. Goth, 682 S.W.2d
- 68 (1984), State of Nebraska v. One 1987 Toyota Pickup, 447 N.W.2d
- 243 (1989), State of New Jersey v. Jones, 438 A.2d 581 (1981),
- State of New Hampshire v. Young, 536 A.2d 1270, 581 N.E.2d 1104
- (Ohio), City of Portland v. $4,345.00 in U.S. Currency, 845 P.2d
- 1301 (1993), Leogrande v. State Liquor Authority, 268 N.Y.S.2d 433
- (N.Y. 1966), $2,067.00 in U.S. Currency v. State of Texas, 745
- S.W.2d 109 (1988), Davis v. State of Utah, 813 P.2d 1178 (1991),
- Franklin v. Klundt, 746 P.2d 1228 (Wa., 1987), and State of Wyoming
- vs. $11,346.00 in United States Currency, 777 P.2d 65 (1989)).
- Iowa and Tennessee were the only two states whose case law seemed
- to differ in any way from the Turner case.
-
- The United States Supreme Court dealt with the issue of items
- seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment and whether such items
- were admissible in civil forfeiture proceedings in the case of One
- 1958 Plymouth Sedan v. Pennsylvania, 380 U.S. 693, 85 S.Ct. 1246 14
- L.Ed. 2d 170 (1965). The Court held that the Fourth Amendment
- exclusionary rule applies not only to criminal proceedings, but
- also to those forfeiture proceedings which are quasi criminal in
- character. The Court found that a forfeiture proceeding is quasi
- criminal in nature if it intends to impose a penalty on the
- individual for violation of the criminal law.
-
- The forfeiture statute used by the State, 21 O.S. 1040.54
- appears almost immediately after 21 O.S. 1040.51, the criminal
- trafficking statute with which Anthony Davis is charged. The
- wording of the forfeiture statute indicates that it is predicated
- on a criminal charge of trafficking. The state of Washington
- considered whether one of their forfeiture statutes was quasi
- criminal in the case of Deeter v. Smith, 721 P.2d 519 (1986). In
- Deeter, it was pointed out that the Washington statute concerning
- forfeiture is in the same title and section as the punishment
- statutes for drug violations. Due to the location and nature of
- the forfeiture statute, the court concluded that the forfeiture
- proceeding had as its primary purpose to penalize individuals who
- participated in the illegal transportation of controlled
- substances. The Oklahoma Forfeiture Statute in question is clearly
- quasi criminal in nature.
-
- PROPOSITION III
-
- BECAUSE PRIVATE ELECTRONIC MAIL AND PUBLISHING
- INFORMATION WERE CONTAINED WITHIN THE
- COMPUTERS SEIZED, A REGULAR SEARCH WARRANT
- WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN SUFFICIENT TO ALLOW SEARCH
- AND SEIZURE OF THE PROPERTY IN QUESTION.
-
- Assuming arguendo that the Court finds there was sufficient
- language in the warrant, or the Court considers the search
- justified based on an exception to the warrant requirement, neither
- justification is sufficient in the case at bar. Electronic
- information inside the computers seized contained constitutionally
- protected private communications and protected publishing
- information, and such information cannot be searched or seized
- without meeting heightened requirements formulated to protect the
- constitutional rights of the possessor.
-
- A. The Search and Seizure Was Conducted Contrary to the
- Electronic Communication Privacy Act Specialized Warrant
- Requirements and Thus Violated the Fourth Amendment
- Protection Against Unreasonable Search and Seizure.
-
- The Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 USC 2510 et
- seq., was originally passed by Congress to regulate wire tapping
- only. The law was expanded in the late 1970s to include electronic
- communications such as private electronic mail. Approximately
- 150,000 pieces of the electronic mail from throughout the world was
- housed within the computer equipment seized. Some of these
- electronic messages were private mail, viewable only by the
- recipient (See Exhibit "B").
-
- Section 2518 of the Act spells out the procedure to allow a
- seizure of items containing electronic communications. After
- application for a warrant is made to a judge, specific findings
- must be made by the judge to approve the warrant. Subsection 3 of
- Section 2518 spells out some of the requirements to be included in
- the affidavit for this type of warrant.
-
- (3)(a) There is probable cause for belief that an
- individual is committing, has committed, or is about to
- commit a particular offense enumerated in 2516 of this
- Act.
-
- (3)(b) There is probable cause for belief that
- particular communications concerning that events will be
- obtained through such interception.
-
- (3)(c) Normal investigative procedures have tried and
- have failed or reasonably appear to be unlikely to
- succeed if tried or if to be too dangerous.
-
- Police officers on the scene were advised by their "computer
- expert" Oklahoma City Police Officer, Gregory Taylor, that a
- bulletin board system was functioning at the search location
- (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at P.118). A bulletin board
- system, by its very nature, is a place for the sending and
- receiving of messages. Additionally, the police department was put
- on notice shortly after the seizure that private electronic mail
- was present within the materials seized (Exhibit "B").
-
- The police may advance the argument that they did not read the
- electronic mail. This argument is irrelevant since the ECPA makes
- it a violation to merely "intercept" such communication. Section
- 2510(4) of the Act defines intercept "the aural or other
- acquisition of the content of any wire, electronic, or oral
- communication through the use of any electronic, mechanical, or
- other device." The police "accessed" the electronic mail in the
- most fundamental sense by picking it up and taking it. The seizure
- prevented any user including Tony Davis from authorized access to
- their communications stored within the system. Because the seizure
- was not authorized by a properly drafted warrant (or by any mention
- on a general warrant), the search and seizure was without
- authorization and in violation of the Act.
-
- B. The Search and Seizure Was Conducted Contrary to the
- Privacy Protection Act Requirement that the Materials Be
- Obtained By Subpoena and, thus, Violated Tony Davis'
- First Amendment Rights.
-
- Tony Davis, through his company, Mid-America Digital,
- published compact disks containing computer software. Records
- seized by the Oklahoma City Police showed that a large number of
- sales of "Magnum" CDs, the brand name used by Mid-America Digital.
- At the search location, there were approximately 2,000 compact
- disks with the name Mid-America Digital, and address 1501 Southeast
- 66th, stamped on each disk. (See Exhibit "B"). Although the
- police seized fifty-seven (57) compact disks that they alleged
- showed pornographic pictures, none of the Mid-America Digital disks
- were taken (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at P.75, line 23 and
- Exhibit "B"). This is because Tony Davis informed the police that
- Mid-America Digital published computer software of a non-adult
- nature (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at P.76, line 21-25 and
- Affidavit of Tony Davis). Neither Tony Davis nor Mid-America
- Digital were ever accused or suspected of publishing illegal or
- pornographic materials. Nonetheless, the Oklahoma City Police
- seized a hard drive within one of the computers which contained
- approximately 500 megabytes of software that was to be pressed into
- a compact disk for the next disk to be published by Mid-America
- Digital.
-
- In 1980, Congress enacted the Privacy Protection Act (PPA), 42
- U.S.C. 2000aa, in order to require law enforcement officials to
- obtain evidence by subpoena or voluntary compliance, rather than by
- search and seizure, from innocent third persons engaged in First
- Amendment activities. Congress feared that "use of the warrant
- process in such cases will allow the government to invade the
- personal privacy of non-suspects in instances where a less
- intrusive means of obtaining the material -- either voluntary
- compliance or a subpoena will achieve the same goal." Senate
- Report No. 874 at 4, 1980 U.S. Code Cong. and Admin. News at 3950-
- 51. The Act reads:
-
- Notwithstanding any other law, it shall be unlawful for
- a government officer or employee, in connection with the
- investigation or prosecution of a criminal offense to
- search for or seize any work product materials possessed
- by a person reasonably believed to have a purpose to
- disseminate to the public a newspaper, book, broadcast,
- or other similar form of public communication, in or
- affecting interstate or foreign commerce...
-
- (42 U.S.C. 2000aa(a).
-
- The computer equipment seized was plainly used "to disseminate
- to the public a newspaper, book, broadcast or other similar form of
- public communication." First, Mid-America Digital published
- collections of software on compact disks and sold it to other
- computer users. The definition of documentary materials found in
- 2000aa-7 indicates that the materials include electronic
- information recorded on disks. Secondly, the actual bulletin board
- system, before it was dismantled, could be read from anywhere in
- the world and offered articles and information to persons dialing
- into the system. A list of the "databases" contained within the
- bulletin board system for viewing by subscribers is set forth in
- Exhibit "B" Page 3.
-
- Subsection (b) of 2000aa indicates that there are four
- requirements necessary in order for the government to search and
- seize such publishing materials.
-
- (b)(1) There is probable cause to believe that the
- person possessing such material has committed or is
- committing the criminal offense to which the materials
- relate.
-
- (b)(2) There is reason to believe that the immediate
- seizure of such materials necessary to prevent the death
- of, or serious bodily injury to, a human being;
-
- (b)(3) There is reason to believe that the giving of
- notice pursuant to a subpoena duces tecum would result in
- the destruction, alteration, or concealment of such
- materials; or
-
- (b)(4) Such materials have not been produced in response
- to a court order directing compliance with a subpoena
- duces tecum and
-
- (a) all appellant remedies have been
- exhausted; or
-
- (b) there is reason to believe that the delay
- in an investigation or trial occasioned by
- further proceedings related to the subpoena
- would threaten the interest of justice.
-
- (c) in the event a search warrant is sought
- pursuant to paragraph 4b of Section b, the
- person possessing the material shall be
- afforded adequate opportunity to submit an
- affidavit setting forth the basis for any
- connection of the materials sought are not
- subject to seizure.
-
- There was never any evidence to indicate that the publishing
- efforts of Mid-America Digital were in any way related to the
- alleged pornography on the "adult" disks seized. In fact, the
- police were apparently convinced of this since they left some 2,000
- compact disks behind, giving as their only reason that they were
- told by Tony Davis that they did not contain pornographic material
- (Preliminary Hearing Transcript at P.80). Additionally, the only
- aspect of the bulletin board system which was the subject of
- investigation, were four (4) allegedly pornographic compact disks
- which were voluntarily removed by Tony Davis prior to the
- dismantling of the computer network system (Preliminary hearing
- transcript at p.54). The police's search and seizure swept so
- broadly that a number of First Amendment protected items were
- seized in violation of the United States Constitution.
-
- WHEREFORE, premises considered, the respondent owner of the
- described property, Anthony A. Davis, respectfully asks this Court
- to dismiss the State's forfeiture action and order the return of
- the property seized.
- Respectfully submitted,
-
-
-
- _________________________________
- WILLIAM R. HOLMES, ATTORNEY, P.C.
- OBA #11867
- 118 East Main Street
- Norman, OK 73069
- (405) 329-6600
- Attorney for Defendant.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 6 Jan 94 16:27:46 GMT
- From: Tony.Davis@f1.n147.z1.fidonet.org (Tony Davis)
- Subject: File 3--Sources for more information on OIE/Tony Davis BBS
-
- The following is a list of the available text files describing the
- current status of the legal situation on :
-
- 1> The State of Oklahoma vs. Tony Davis
- (Felony Criminal Charges)
-
- 2> The State of Oklahoma vs. The Oklahoma Information Exchange BBS.
- (Civil Forfeiture Action)
-
- This list is updated as new files become available.
-
- The information is available by two different methods:
-
- ============================================================
-
- INTERNET:
-
- Send an E-Mail Message To:
-
- FTPMAIL@OKINFO.MISC.UOKNOR.EDU
-
- In the body of the message
-
- GET CHARGES.TXT (A copy of the criminal charges)
- GET MOTION.TXT (A copy of the motion to dismiss on forfeiture action)
- GET PRELIM.TXT (A non-lawyer's opinion of the Preliminary Hearing)
- GET 092793.TXT (A Daily Oklahoman News Article)
- GET BWM31.TXT (The Boardwatch Article By Jack Rickard)
- GET BWM48.TXT (The Boardwatch Article By Lance Rose)
- GET FUND.TXT (Announcement of Legal Defense Fund)
- GET BUST.ZIP (A Zip File that includes all the above)
-
- GET ECPA.ZIP (The Electronic Communications Privacy Act)
-
- *** IMPORTANT ***
-
- My Internet FTPMAIL server works great, but has a minor limitation.
- It only allows one "GET" per message. If you want more than one of
- the files, please use multiple messages.
-
- ============================================================
-
- FIDONET:
-
- All the following file names are also File Requestable from 1:147/1
-
- CHARGES.TXT (A copy of the criminal charges)
- MOTION.TXT (A copy of the motion to dismiss on forfeiture action)
- PRELIM.TXT (A non-lawyer's opinion of the Preliminary Hearing)
- 092793.TXT (A Daily Oklahoman News Article)
- BWM31.TXT (The Boardwatch Article By Jack Rickard)
- BWM48.TXT (The Boardwatch Article By Lance Rose)
- FUND.TXT (Announcement of Legal Defense Fund)
- BUST.ZIP (A Zip File that includes all the above)
-
- ECPA.ZIP (The Electronic Communications Privacy Act)
-
- ============================================================
-
- Tony Davis
- The Out-On-Bail BBS: 1-405-386-6760
- uucp: uunet!m2xenix!puddle!147!1!Tony.Davis
- Internet: Tony.Davis@f1.n147.z1.fidonet.org
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 7 Jan 94 05:56:42 EST
- From: Mitchell L. Silverman <mitch@VESHEU.SAR.USF.EDU>
- Subject: File 4--Re: Ratings Servers and the Diversity of USENET (#1)
-
- (I'm mailing this to Tokind and Mr. Williams to get their comments,
- and to the CuD moderatorship as a possible submission. I have no
- real public role on the Net--just an ordinary net.citizen--but free
- speech, on the Net and in the physical world, is something that
- interests and moves me profoundly.)
-
- In CuD #6.03, File 7, Stephen Williams (sdw@MEADDATA.COM) wrote:
-
- >One senario is that teachers or organizations worldwide could
- >'register' to each other and share the responsibility of endorsing
- >messages in certain groups. If there needed to be culpability, the
- >endorsers could be tracked down if needed.
- >
- >This would be totally optional on an adult's account and mandatory on
- >a minor's account, unless proper permission was obtained. It might,
- >in certain situations, also reduce the signal-to-noise ratio. Another
- >interesting use is to change the nature of moderated groups: the group
- >could be unmoderated in the current sense, but users could choose
- >moderators who would agree to endorse messages that had good content.
- >You could have several 'competing' moderators in the same group,
- >almost like news organizations.
-
- Well done, sir! You're on to something, I think.
-
- But the possibilities inherent in your second suggestion interest me
- more than the first. I have a number of friends on the Net, and there
- are others on the Net whose opinions I trust. It's currently
- possible, even easy, for me to read a particular newsgroup scanning
- for a particular name. I could even put all the names of each person
- whose judgment I trusted in a sort of reverse killfile, if I so
- wished, I think. (Knowing *how* to do this is another story!)
-
- But what of your endorsements? If the people whose opinions I value
- aren't set up as these critical organizations--perhaps I'm a fan of
- DR. B1FF THA PSYNCE D00D, or I'm one of those SubGenius weirdos--and
- I'd like to see what dogma the Church's "members" are spewing today.
- What am I to do?
-
- When you're designing your endorsement service, can you think of a way
- to do it that allows for:
-
- o finding articles endorsed by people on the Net
- across the continent from me--and without them necessarily having
- to register for an endorsement key (or some such)
- o in some cases, more endorsement text (per message, user, etc.) than
- message text
- o different classes or "alignments" of endorsements?
- Readers of alt.fan.rush-limbaugh should have as much 'right' to tag
- someone a pinko Feminazi as I do to tag someone as terminally
- Pink--and to publish that assessment, that 'endorsement.'
- o conflicting and even competing endorsements of content
- and character
-
- It may well be that having each message carry all that information
- will prove over-burdensome. Perhaps an Internet server, something
- like Gopher or WWW, which *can* carry information specific to a
- particular message's content (pornographic, racist, ill-informed, or
- otherwise--I'm sure even our esteemed moderators on the CuD have
- their lapses when posting news), but which also have ratings for
- individuals, newsgroups, sites FTP and otherwise, and organizations.
- (And perhaps each of the regional service providers, or other backbone
- sites, may have copies of several ratings servers--as with netfind and
- some larger FTP sites, mirroring helps reduce the load in one place.)
-
- And rest assured, there will (and should be) several ratings
- servers--at a minimum. If I'm interested in finding a good cop show
- on TV, ABC's "ratings server" might tell me to watch "NYPD Blue," CBS
- will tell me to watch "Homicide," and the AFA will tell me to watch
- "Dragnet"--or "The Old Time Gospel Hour." (Well, I never agree with
- the AFA anyway.) In practice, of course, the networks don't seem to
- push their TV critics to push their own shows, but I've not looked at
- interlocking directorates usw.--this is just an example. I want to
- have some choice of opinions to listen to.
-
- But how would we on the net structure a ratings service? And who will
- rate the raters? Some rating services aren't going to get listened
- to, some are. If the EFF started a ratings server, for example, or
- CPSR, their ratings servers would be taken pretty seriously. But is
- corporate good name the only coin these ratings servers would proffer
- as an earnest?
-
- I should point out that I think a non-monopoly ratings server or
- system would be a Good Thing, especially in that it would allow
- middle school and high school students better and freer Net access
- (or rather, it would allow middle school and high school
- administrators--and prudish parents--to feel that their charges were
- safe.) But my major concern is in making sure that meeting this
- goal, and possibly the others Mr. Williams mentions, doesn't produce
- a system that cannot address the concerns I raise. Likely whatever
- system gets produced first--unless it's crufty and unusable
- software--will be the ratings system of the (foreseeable) future--and
- who in 1979 at Duke would have imagined where things would be by
- 1994? True, the netnews formats have been revamped, but not as
- drastically, I think, as the changes between what Mr. Williams
- suggests and what I think such a system needs to allow for.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 7 Jan 1994 12:14:09 -0500 (EST)
- From: sdw@MEADDATA.COM(Stephen Williams)
- Subject: File 5--Re: File 7--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #2
-
- > Response to <tokind@ACCA.NMSU.EDU>
- >
- > Thanks for a good, thoughtful article.
- >
- > It occurs to me that the ratings service you mention would need some
- > kind of authentication. I'm sure that even as I type this, there are
- > people typing shrieks of "censorship"; some of these people are of the
- > mentality that they would register their protest at any kind of rating
- > system by reposting copies of "Cindy's Torment" in the kiddie groups,
- > and forging a "G" rating. (You Know Who You Are.)
-
- It absolutely should have an OPTIONAL authentication. Optional
- because if I'm just using it to enhance message sorting, it's not a
- big deal if it is forged. I would want authentication in legal
- liability avoidance situations.
-
- > I'd love to have an "intelligent, or, at least, amusing content"
- > rating. Unfortunately, given net volume, this means a huge investment
- > of people reading and rating the net, or advances in AI far beyond
- > anything that seems likely to appear this century. Especially since my
- > standards of "intelligent and/or amusing" won't match anyone else's.
-
- I guess I feel that people are already investing a huge amount of time
- reading the net and that those that really keep up on a particular
- group wouldn't mind pressing an extra key to approve/disapprove/type
- an article. Not all articles have to have a rating either.
-
- My idea was that it would only be useful in certain groups. Also,
- since you can 'tune in' to certain reviewers you like (just like movie
- reviewers), you can try to match your tastes with others.
-
- It is even conceivable that you could 'choose' reviewers implicitly by
- giving your own rating and having the system record who was in
- agreement. It would be an interesting instant/continous opinion poll
- on topics.
-
- > The signal-to-noise problem is the biggest one the net faces, as volume
- > explodes with increasing access. Few of us want to restrict access, of
- > course. As someone said, "I don't have a solution, but I sure admire
- > the problem."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 7 Jan 1994 14:06:54 -0500 (EST)
- From: sdw@MEADDATA.COM(Stephen Williams)
- Subject: File 6--Re: Ratings Servers and the Diversity of USENET (#2)
-
- > In CuD #6.03, File 7, Stephen Williams (sdw@MEADDATA.COM) wrote:
- >
- > >One senario is that teachers or organizations worldwide could
- > >'register' to each other and share the responsibility of endorsing
- ...
- > Well done, sir! You're on to something, I think.
-
- Thanks.
-
- > But the possibilities inherent in your second suggestion interest me
- > more than the first. I have a number of friends on the Net, and there
- > are others on the Net whose opinions I trust. It's currently
- > possible, even easy, for me to read a particular newsgroup scanning
- > for a particular name. I could even put all the names of each person
- > whose judgment I trusted in a sort of reverse killfile, if I so
- > wished, I think. (Knowing *how* to do this is another story!)
- >
- > But what of your endorsements? If the people whose opinions I value
- > aren't set up as these critical organizations--perhaps I'm a fan of
- > DR. B1FF THA PSYNCE D00D, or I'm one of those SubGenius weirdos--and
- > I'd like to see what dogma the Church's "members" are spewing today.
- > What am I to do?
-
- Ahh... A misunderstanding. The viewpoint I was rebutting did expect
- that official 'servers' would be setup, but that is not my proposal.
-
- My criteria for this type of system is that it be minimalist, usable
- by anyone receiving netnews now, and implementable with few changes to
- existing software. The basis for endorsements in my scheme is just a
- new type of message, which is just a properly formatted, but normal,
- netnews message. This means that it will be propagated by current
- software, available in raw form to all readers, etc. That solves the
- problem of distribution, storage, flow, etc. No one should have a
- fundamental problem with endorsement messages since it is just a
- formal (and machine readable) way of following up with a 'yay' or
- 'nay' (or '???').
-
- The only essential software changes are at the news reader to handle
- creation and awareness of endorsement messages.
-
- I'm a little bit worried about increasing the number of messages with
- overlapping endorsements from many people, so I've been thinking of
- what types of changes to server software (ie. INN) would make sure the
- method is scalable.
-
- As a performance and storage enhancement, endorsements could be added
- to indexes, added to messages, coalesced into bulk-endorsement
- messages, etc. My plan is to release a modified Tin reader and INN
- server.
-
- I do believe that authentication keys are needed as an Optional
- feature and I do keep up on PGP/Cypherpunks somewhat, but that is
- going to be a trailing feature.
-
- > When you're designing your endorsement service, can you think of a way
- > to do it that allows for:
- >
- > o finding articles endorsed by people on the Net
- > across the continent from me--and without them necessarily having
- > to register for an endorsement key (or some such)
-
- Should be doable with news scanning software.
- Easy within a particular group.
-
- > o in some cases, more endorsement text (per message, user, etc.) than
- > message text
-
- I've been thinking about simple typed endorsements, but having a whole
- article with editorial content refering to or possibly replacing
- (summaries?) articles is an interesting idea. A 'moderator' might
- choose to summarize a thread, but you could still 'drill down' into
- the original text.
-
- > o different classes or "alignments" of endorsements?
- > Readers of alt.fan.rush-limbaugh should have as much 'right' to tag
- > someone a pinko Feminazi as I do to tag someone as terminally
- > Pink--and to publish that assessment, that 'endorsement.'
-
- Group membership of endorsement agents is also interesting, but I'm
- not sure of the best method here. Possibly a paired set of personal
- and group id's.
-
- > o conflicting and even competing endorsements of content
- > and character
-
- Of course! Fundamental to my design.
-
- >
- > It may well be that having each message carry all that information
- > will prove over-burdensome. Perhaps an Internet server, something
- > like Gopher or WWW, which *can* carry information specific to a
- > particular message's content (pornographic, racist, ill-informed, or
- > otherwise--I'm sure even our esteemed moderators on the CuD have
- > their lapses when posting news), but which also have ratings for
- > individuals, newsgroups, sites FTP and otherwise, and organizations.
- > (And perhaps each of the regional service providers, or other backbone
- > sites, may have copies of several ratings servers--as with netfind and
- > some larger FTP sites, mirroring helps reduce the load in one place.)
- >
- ...
- > But how would we on the net structure a ratings service? And who will
- > rate the raters? Some rating services aren't going to get listened
- > to, some are. If the EFF started a ratings server, for example, or
- > CPSR, their ratings servers would be taken pretty seriously. But is
- > corporate good name the only coin these ratings servers would proffer
- > as an earnest?
-
- I'm still pondering the idea of a ratings server. Big problems of
- scalability just to have someone else 'hear' your opinion. A feed of
- endorsements is different however. There could even be a commercial
- feed of endorsements. (I've considered starting one and Barry Shein
- has expressed an interest in supporting one.)
-
- I do think that the format of an endorsement should be general,
- probably based on URL/URN's from the WWW people. I'm on the url list
- and I'll try to digest it later.
-
- > I should point out that I think a non-monopoly ratings server or
- > system would be a Good Thing, especially in that it would allow
- ...
- > 1994? True, the netnews formats have been revamped, but not as
- > drastically, I think, as the changes between what Mr. Williams
- > suggests and what I think such a system needs to allow for.
-
- Hopefully we can come up with minimal changes with minimal impact on
- bandwidth and maximal features. I'm pushed to implement myself (any
- help is appreciated :-)) mainly to make sure it is open and
- anti-censorship, while still being useful.
-
- As I mentioned before, the copyright license will disallow any blatant
- censorship. This is very clear where adults are concerned.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 7 Jan 1994 14:03:37 CST
- From: Ken Furuta Government Documents
- Subject: File 7--Congressperson's Gopher in Arizona
-
- I went to a press conference at Arizona State University this morning.
- In it Representative Sam Coppersmith of the Arizona First
- Congressional District announced a gopher server containing his
- position papers and press releases (including the one I got this
- morning announcing the server). The gopher also has connections to
- other governmental servers.
-
- To see it, point your gopher to Arizona State University. Once here,
- select "Arizona Statewide Information" from the first menu. Next
- select "U.S. Rep. Sam Coppersmith."
-
- Rep. Coppersmith may be the first Congressperson to offer such a
- service - they checked but did not find anyone else with one. He is
- also one of those first 12 members testing e-mail. In addition, he has
- a listserv based at ASU. Both addresses are in the press release on
- the gopher.
-
- When asked why do it, Coppersmith said: 1) It is useful as a learning
- tool to try out the Internet and see what's out there and; 2) It is a
- way to re-connect people with the government.
-
- He talked a bit about the "Information have nots." I was glad to hear
- him say that Public Libraries are taking a leadership role.
-
- My feeling is that even though parts of the Federal Government
- developed the network, the rest are finally discovering it. Every time
- I look there is a new server from a different agency. It is exciting
- to watch the progress while hoping that additional agencies join the
- trend. With any luck, Rep. Coppersmith's example will spur them on.
- Heck, if it does I promise to actually read his mailings I get at home
- even if my name is not constituent.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #6.04
- ************************************
-