Quebecker Faces Jail For Not Giving Up Phone Password To Canadian Officials
wired_parrot writes Canadian customs officials have charged a 38-year old man with obstruction of justice after he refused to give up his Blackberry phone password [on arrival in Canada by plane from the Dominican Republic]. As this is a question that has not yet been litigated in Canadian courts, it may establish a legal precedent for future cases. From the article: [Law professor Rob] Currie says the issue of whether a traveller must reveal a password to an electronic device at the border hasn't been tested by a court.
"This is a question that has not been litigated in Canada, whether they can actually demand you to hand over your password to allow them to unlock the device," he said. "One thing for them to inspect it, another thing for them to compel you to help them."
Terabytes (Petabytes?) of encrypted data enters the country every day from across the world via the internet, yet Border Services thinks they need to inspect the data on everyone's phones?
I sincerely hope he wins the case.
The person in question is a Canadian citizen and cannot be denied reentry into Canada or sent back.
"He is so stupid. And now back to the wall!" Moe Szyslak
They still should not be compelled to reveal the password. Even blanket immunity should not allow them to force you since it still might ruin your life or worse reasonably fear for your life and safety and ones close to you.
No sir I dont like it.
Why not just back it up to the cloud, and then wipe it for the border crossing? Then, restore when you're safely inside the border.
I don't know how it works in the US, but the Canadian government cannot refuse a Canadian citizen entry into the country. That's a very good thing.
IANAL, but my answer would be no
And probably just as important in this case is YJMV - Your Jurisdiction May Vary. The UK is fascist country where I know it's illegal, I wouldn't bring any device I wouldn't unlock - I'd just make sure it's clean and I can download what I want once inside the country. The US is a fairly safe country thanks to the fifth amendment. The rest of the world? Dunno. Don't really care to research it either. If I was doing anything naughty I'd send it online or even in the mail. At least then they can't refuse me entry or any of that shit.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
It's only Quebecois if you're speaking French. En anglais, it's Quebecker.
New phone feature idea: a settable password which, when entered, instantly wipes the phone. (Throws away the encryption keys and shuts down.)
E pluribus unum
Honestly, you should treat any border like this. Take only disposable devices. Access any needed data via a VPN once inside the country.
>The other pass code BRICKS the goddam phone. That's the one we give the authorities.
And then you go to jail for obstruction of justice ("Your honor, the defendant bought a model of phone known to have a self-wipe capability and deliberately gave the wipe password because examination of the phone shows evidence of a wipe instead of damage to the phone, as claimed.") and they start going over your life with a fine toothed comb and slam you with tampering with evidence charge if they do.
Do you and your kind have the tiniest amount of brains in your head with which to think things through?
then you get charged with destruction of evidence, or obstructing justice, or some other cobbled up charge, even if there was no "evidence" on the device in the first place, you can't prove that after it's wiped. Yeah, if you lawyer up you might be able to get out of the charges, but your life is already heavily disrupted at a minimum.