The Dallas Morning News on Friday ran an editorial I authored on the need for legislative action to provide greater oversight and transparency regarding law enforcement's access to GPS tracking data from cell phones and other electronic devices. The column appeared behind their paywall, but I've reprinted it below the jump.
Scott Henson: Austin, end unregulated GPS tracking by police
In an era of smartphones and near-ubiquitous GPS tracking of our cars
and electronic devices, Texas statutes protecting its citizens’ privacy
have failed to keep up with rapidly changing technology, allowing
government access to personal location data from cellphones and other
electronic devices without any judicial oversight. Those records are
sealed permanently in Texas, without even aggregate data reported, as
has long been required when police use old-fashioned wiretaps or
trap-and-trace devices.
Mobile-phone carriers told Congress last
year that law enforcement accessed their customers’ location data more
than 1.3 million times in 2011. Because of outdated surveillance
statutes and diminished open-records laws, Texans can’t know how often,
nor for what purpose, police gather citizens’ cellphone location data.
There’s no way to tell how many of those 1.3-plus million incidents
occurred in Texas, nor which agencies most frequently gather location
data, much less how often that sort of tracking led to arrests or
indictments.
Are such data gathered by “fusion centers” or other
intelligence-gathering divisions of law enforcement? Are they used to
track political protesters, whether from the Occupy movement or at
anti-abortion rallies? Have they ever been misused in ways that resulted
in disciplinary actions against officers? Under current statutes,
there’s no way to know.
Privacy advocates are asking the
Legislature to consider a bill requiring a warrant for law enforcement
to access cellphone-location data, with exceptions for emergencies and
when the owner of an electronic device reports it stolen. It would also
eventually unseal information about law enforcement’s use of those
records after the investigation is complete, making such transactions
subject to Texas open-records laws. It would require aggregate reporting
about GPS tracking comparable to what’s required for old-fashioned (and
now rarely used) wiretaps and trap-and-trace devices, giving the public
a window onto how frequently law enforcement tracks them.
What
little we do know about cases in which location data is gathered raises
questions about whether it has been used too broadly. Federal Magistrate
Judge Stephen Smith in Houston has written: “Asked to furnish … cases
brought against individuals who had been subject to warrantless
cellphone tracking since 2001, the Department of Justice identified …
about 38 cases a year. Given that the federal government obtains tens of
thousands of these orders every year, this data suggests that the
government is spending more time chasing the innocent than the black
sheep and ne’er-do-wells.”
How state and local jurisdictions in
Texas use such data probably varies widely. For the most part, such
decisions are made in a murky realm beyond judicial or public oversight
that lends itself at a minimum to the appearance of overuse and,
potentially, abuse.
Courts have typically been slow to extend
constitutional protections to new technologies. The telephone was
invented in the 1870s but the Supreme Court did not require a warrant to
wiretap a telephone conversation until 1967. There’s no reason to wait
that long to install protections for location data emanating from our
personal electronic devices.
When the Supreme Court said in U.S.
vs. Jones (2012) that placing a physical tracking device on a personal
vehicle was a search, Texas law already required a court order, though
not a full-blown search warrant, for police to use that tactic. But if
police want to request your physical location data over, say, the last
six months from your cellphone provider, they need only issue a
subpoena. No judge need ever know about it unless they later decide to
submit the location data as evidence (which, from the numbers Judge
Smith presented from the federal system, doesn’t seem to happen all that
often).
These are simple, logical updates to Texas’ criminal law
that the Legislature could enact during the 83rd session, without
waiting for Congress or the Supreme Court to finally get to the problem
many years down the line. Why wait? Texas should act to protect public
privacy now and place reasonable limits on location tracking by law
enforcement.
Far better to die in the land of the free than to live in the Soviet Union, China or Iran!!
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