[Vision2020] GPS Tracking and Secret Policies

Art Deco art.deco.studios at gmail.com
Sat Aug 17 04:50:57 PDT 2013


  [image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>

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August 16, 2013
GPS Tracking and Secret Policies By THE EDITORIAL
BOARD<http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/opinion/editorialboard.html>

This week brought fresh revelations about the National Security Agency’s
sloppy and invasive collection of phone data on Americans and others, as
reported first by The Washington Post. In another realm of surveillance —
the government’s broad use of location tracking devices — the Justice
Department was in federal court on Thursday defending its refusal to
release memos containing information about its policies governing the use
of GPS and other potentially invasive technologies.

The American Civil Liberties Union had brought the lawsuit to demand that
the department make the memos public. The documents were prepared after a
2012 Supreme Court ruling, United States v. Jones, which held that
placement of a hidden tracking device on a suspect’s car constitutes a
“search” under the Fourth Amendment.

That case left lots of questions unanswered, including whether GPS tracking
always requires a warrant based on probable cause, and how the Fourth
Amendment applies to tracking someone 24/7 with cellphone location
technology. After the decision was released, the F.B.I.’s general counsel,
Andrew Weissmann, mentioned in a public talk that the government was
issuing memos containing official guidance for federal agents and
prosecutors on when they can use tracking technology and how the Jones
decision applies to other types of techniques, beyond GPS.

The public has a right to know the government’s policies on these matters.
There is very good reason to be concerned about the government’s
interpretation of its police powers, especially given the Obama
administration’s insensitivity to privacy in its mass collection of phone
data in the national security sphere.

When the A.C.L.U. filed a request for the memos under the Freedom of
Information Act, the Justice Department responded by handing over copies
with the text nearly entirely blanked out, prompting the lawsuit. The
Justice Department claims that the memos were prepared anticipating
litigation and are exempt from disclosure because they are a lawyer’s work
product. But to the extent Mr. Weissmann accurately represented the memos,
they also amount to statements of official policy, not merely exchanges by
lawyers on legal theories, which the work-product exception is meant to
protect.

Our strong hunch is that there is material in the memos that can and should
be revealed without harm to law enforcement or the appropriate discussion
of confidential legal strategies. At Thursday’s hearing, Judge William
Pauley III said he would personally review the documents before deciding
whether they should be released.

It is distressing that the administration, which claims to welcome a debate
over the government’s surveillance practices, time and again refuses to be
transparent about those practices. Instead of awaiting a court order, the
administration should release the tracking memos on its own.


-- 
Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)
art.deco.studios at gmail.com
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