
The US Department of Justice issued a report in January 2001 that provides detailed instructions to police agencies on procedures to follow and legal justifications that can be cited for spying on, searching and seizing electronic information and information systems.
Some of the topics covered in this document are "Searching And Seizing Computers Without A Warrant," "Basic Strategies For Executing Computer Searches," "Electronic Surveillance In Communications Networks," "Working with Network Providers: Preservation of Evidence," "Preventing Disclosure to Subjects," and "Cable Act Issues, Authenticity and the Alteration of Computer Records."
We publish this document to underscore the need for political activists to safeguard information and to anticipate attacks by the political police.
A PDF copy [520K] is available to download here. The Justice Department source is http://www.cybercrime.gov/searching.html
The following are excerpts from the Introduction:
"The dramatic increase in computer-related crime requires prosecutors and law enforcement agents to understand how to obtain electronic evidence stored in computers. Electronic records such as computer network logs, e-mails, word processing files, and ".jpg" picture files increasingly provide the government with important (and sometimes essential) evidence in criminal cases. The purpose of this publication is to provide Federal law enforcement agents and prosecutors with systematic guidance that can help them understand the legal issues that arise when they seek electronic evidence in criminal investigations.
"Chapter 2 discusses the law that governs the search and seizure of computers pursuant to search warrants. The chapter begins by reviewing the steps that investigators should follow when planning and executing searches to seize computer hardware and computer data with a warrant. In particular, the chapter focuses on two issues: first, how investigators should plan to execute computer searches, and second, how they should draft the proposed search warrants and their accompanying affidavits. Finally, the chapter ends with a discussion of post-search issues. Questions addressed in the chapter include: When should investigators plan to search computers on the premises, and when should they remove the computer hardware and search it later off- site? How should investigators plan their searches to avoid civil liability under the Privacy Protection Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000aa? How should prosecutors draft search warrant language so that it complies with the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment and Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure? What is the law governing when the government must search and return seized computers?
"The focus of Chapter 3 is the stored communications portion of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2701-11 ("ECPA"). ECPA governs how investigators can obtain stored account records and contents from network service providers, including Internet service providers (ISPs), telephone companies, cell phone service providers, and satellite services. ECPA issues arise often in cases involving the Internet: any time investigators seek stored information concerning Internet accounts from providers of Internet service, they must comply with the statute. Topics covered in this section include: How can the government obtain e-mails and network account logs from ISPs? When does the government need to obtain a search warrant, as opposed to 18 U.S.C. § 2703(d) order or a subpoena? When can providers disclose e-mails and records to the government voluntarily? What remedies will courts impose when ECPA has been violated?
"Chapter 4 reviews the legal framework that governs electronic surveillance, with particular emphasis on how the statutes apply to surveillance on the communications networks. In particular, the chapter discusses Title III as modified by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-22 (referred to here as "Title III"), as well as the Pen Register and Trap and Trace Devices statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3121-27. These statutes govern when and how the government can conduct real-time surveillance, such as monitoring a computer hacker's activity as he breaks into a government computer network. Topics addressed in this chapter include: When can victims of computer crime monitor unauthorized intrusions into their networks and disclose that information to law enforcement? Can network "banners" generate implied consent to monitoring? How can the government obtain a pen register/trap and trace order that permits the government to collect packet header information from Internet communications? What remedies will courts impose when the electronic surveillance statutes have been violated?"
[posted 1/28/01]
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