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Judge Rules Man Cannot Be Forced To Decrypt HD

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "In Vermont, US Magistrate Judge Jerome Niedermeier has ruled that forcing someone to divulge the password to decrypt their hard drive violates the 5th Amendment. Border guards testify that they saw child pornography on the defendant's laptop when the PC was on, but they made the mistake of turning it off and were unable to access it again because the drive was protected by PGP. Although prosecutors offered many ways to get around the 5th Amendment protections, the Judge would have none of that and quashed the grand jury subpoena requesting the defendant's PGP passphrase. A conviction is still likely because prosecutors have the testimony of the two border guards who saw the drive while it was open." The article stresses the potential importance of this ruling (which was issued last November but went unnoticed until now): "Especially if this ruling is appealed, US v. Boucher could become a landmark case. The question of whether a criminal defendant can be legally compelled to cough up his encryption passphrase remains an unsettled one, with law review articles for the last decade arguing the merits of either approach."

Update: 08/19 23:49 GMT by KD : Several readers have pointed out that this story in fact did not go unnoticed.

15 of 775 comments (clear)

  1. The devil is in the details by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From TFA:

    "thousands of images of adult pornography and animation depicting adult and child pornography."

    I know that TFA is about encryption and the rights to passwords but I think the phrase above is far more interesting. That quote could be misleading, but what if the Border Enforcers didn't find any photographs or videos(hell, any evidence at all)of real human child exploitation?

    If they are able to legally get the key and crack the drive, and all they found was animation, then maybe they should just give him a warning and and call him a "perv"...especially if he has "thousands" of files and not a single one is "real".

    By the way, those of you who fantasize about your wife or girlfriend in a schoolgirl outfit are also pervs :)

    1. Re:The devil is in the details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Naah. Society has lost it's mind when it comes to children, period. There's some sort of popular myth that started with the Baby Boomer generation that children need to be protected from everything. I'm not saying that sexual abuse of a child is ever right, but I'm saying that we have come to hold this purported "innocence" as sacrosanct, much to the detriment of society in general, as we have raised a generation of kids unable to deal with even getting a job on their own. The sooner we realize that kids don't need coddled, and need to be educated, this shit will go away by itself for a large part.

      I'd love to post this signed in, but I'm afraid that in the current climate, people will start hunting me down as some kind of pedophile (which is the new version of the word "witch", "commie", or "fag", depending on what era you're from). An unassailable accusation that you have no hope in hell of defending yourself against, even if there is no truth to it.

    2. Re:The devil is in the details by Smauler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're a true anonymous coward. I'm perfectly happy saying that the entire system is completely screwed, and I'll be damned if I'm going to become anonymous.

      An example of the absolutely screwed up laws in the UK : It is perfectly legal for anyone to screw a 16 year old girl, any way they want. However, if after they banged her every which way, they drew a picture of her naked and gave it to her, they can be done for distributing child pornography and put away for god knows how many years. I'm perfectly happy to say that this is fucked up legislation, and if you're not happy to come out and say that publically, then you're part of the problem.

      Before you say this could never happen, something like this did happen somewhere in the US (I don't remember any exact details). It was a state where the age of consent was 16, and two 17 year old partners got busted for sending naked images of _themselves_ to each other. They got community service and put on the sexual offenders register for life. This is a farce, and the more people who say it is a farce, the quicker it will get fixed.

    3. Re:The devil is in the details by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, the law is that the image must of of a 'real' child for it to be child-porn. But last year I was reading an article where prosecutors were switching from having experts go on the stand to 'prove' that the images are real, to just saying that the jury is competent to decide if the image is real or not [even though everyone knows that CG images can be so realistic that it can be difficult/impossible for an expert in digital imagery to determine if it's 'real' or not]. So, basically prosecutors are going for jury-sympathy, that the guy is a perv and should be locked away, whether or not the image is CG. Not that I have a problem with this, as this is the kind of distinction that makes the problem worse, but it can also wind up dragging in 'artistic' images as well.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    4. Re:The devil is in the details by mcpkaaos · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Free expression depends upon one's ability to remain anonymous. Even the bravest individual will hold back when their identity is known or potentially discoverable.

      Please don't be so quick to judge someone simply because you are comfortable revealing your identity (Mr. Smauler? S. Mauler?) while they are not.

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    5. Re:The devil is in the details by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And this, in a nutshell, is why it is judges who set the punishment for offenders and not victims or relatives of victims.

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
  2. People really are stupid by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Turn *off* your laptop before going through customs.
    Turn off the GRUB menu and change the default key combination to have it come up.
    Have a WinXP install to boot up into and set it as the default boot option.

    Strong cryptography is lovely but it is not for idiots.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:People really are stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      recent? the fact you mention semesters suggests you're at university, probably no older than 24-25. the US has been semi-totalitarian for almost 8 years now, that's a third of your life.

  3. Re:Uh-Oh by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because if your rights and freedoms do not stand up when applied to the worst of the worst then they most likely won't stand up when applied to you.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  4. Re:Sweet! by pcolaman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Considering that the constitution provides that he shouldn't be forced to incriminate himself, it is definitely good news that the Judge didn't try to rewrite the constitution. It's high time that we start holding the judges who disagree with this concept accountable.

  5. Re:Sweet! by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, let's stop pretending that this has anything at all to do with "child pornography".

    The justice department was just trying to get some case law saying an individual could be forced to relinquish his password, and by using "child pornography" they thought they could bully some judge into betraying the Constitution. It's a good sign that those sons of bitches lost, too.

    And ultimately, torture doesn't work. Eventually, a society that violates basic human rights so blatantly will fall, and often (but not always) the perpetrators end up on the other end of the see-saw. Then, it becomes harder to find people who will obey orders to torture. We in America will eventually learn that it was a huge mistake to forsake our principles and become a torture regime. But, I can only hope that Bush, Cheney, Gonzalez and others will face the music. There's no guarantee that justice moves quickly enough to give that kind of satisfaction. But move it does - and inexorably.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  6. Re:Slashdot crazies who know nothing about the law by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I fail to understand how a court can't order the asshole to produce the data.

    Because the data is in his head, not on a physical document. If he had written it down the court could order him to hand over the hardcopy. But if they could order him to divulge the contents of his memory to be used as evidence against him they could do it, not just for passwords, but for anything else. (Like: "Did you kill Jane Doe?") The famous part of the 5th Amendment expressly prohibits that.

    What would "enforcing" such an order consist of? Torture. That's WHY it's prohibited.

    This case is going to come down to two sworn officers asserting they saw kiddie porn on exhibit A, the laptop. Almost any jury is going to be willing to accept that as proof beyond a reasonable doubt considering the defense could rebutt by simply unlocking the laptop and proving their innocence.

    It's not up to the defendant in a criminal case to prove his innocence. It's up to the prosecution to prove his guilt. Are the officers such experts in video synthesis and manipulation that they can determine, at a glance, that the images were of actual children? No? Tough luck. If that's all they have I'd expect the judge to direct the verdict or throw it out for lack of evidence.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  7. Re:Sweet! by lgw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, let's stop pretending that this has anything at all to do with "child pornography".

    Thank you Pope Ratzo!

    Any time the government wants to remove one more right from you, the test case will always be a charge of child pornography or terrorism. But it's not like the precdent will be "only for accused terrorists" - it will be used for anyone. Even if it were, accusing your political opponents of being pedophiles or terrorists in order to use the "special case" laws against them has been done throughout recorded history. It's not exactly hard to put encrypted child porn on a seized laptop after the fact, if you're willing to break a law to get a conviction!

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  8. Re:of course by dougmc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sounds good, but I think the estimate was that there's at least 10,000 federal laws -- and so no single person could possibly know them all.

    So while the police are combing through your hard drive, and while they don't find any child pornography, they DO find a picture of you holding a baby bird -- and it turns out that some 1856 law made illegal to handle this type of bird without a permit. And here's evidence of you violating the law.

    Or, perhaps they don't find any child pornography ... until they scan every sector on the disk and find some thumbnail of some picture of a naked 8 year old girl that was deleted 18 months ago. If they'd dug deeper, they might have learned that that was from getting redirected to a child pornography site in Romania by some typo-squatter, which you immediately closed and never visited again -- but the DA is up for re-election, and he doesn't want to give up this new feather in his cap, the child pornographer he just took off the street. He doesn't care that you're innocent, only that you're helping prove that he's tough on child pornography.

    No, cops and vampires are best not invited into your home, or your hard drives. Even if proving perjury is `priceless'. (And really, it wouldn't prove perjury. The cop would just say `I guess I was mistaken. My bad.' Though he probably wouldn't even say that.)

  9. Re:Sweet! by draco664 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well there's your problem. You used an amateur. Try getting a professional to do it. I guarantee you'll change your opinion.