U.S. court says feds need reasonable suspicion to search laptops at borders
Ruling is significant because it is first to establish a standard for border searches of electronic devices
Computerworld - Less than six week after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a civil rights impact assessment stating that the government needed no warrant or cause to search laptops and other electronic devices at U.S. borders, a federal appellate court has ruled otherwise.
In what is seen as a significant ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit last week held that border agents do need to have reasonable suspicion in order to conduct forensic searches of electronic devices belonging to travelers at the border.
"The uniquely sensitive nature of data on electronic devices, which often retain information far beyond the perceived point of erasure, carries with it a significant expectation of privacy," the court noted.
The ruling fell somewhat short of the more stringent 'probable cause' standard that many rights groups have been advocating for border searches for some time. Even so, it marked the first time an appellate court has upheld the need for federal agents at the border to have at least some cause before they can search electronic devices.
The issue is an important one, not just for private individuals but also for business travelers who often carry laptops holding sensitive company data.
In recent years, DHS agents have searched thousands of electronic devices at the border, in most cases without warrants or reasonable cause. In some cases, the devices have been confiscated and the contents copied before being returned to the owner.
The searches have prompted considerable concern about sensitive corporate data and customer information becoming exposed or compromised.
Privacy groups and rights advocates have slammed the searches as being unconstitutional. They have argued that laptops, smartphones and other electronic devices contain highly personal and sensitive data and are therefore very different from other pieces of luggage a traveler might have. Such groups have maintained that border agents need to have specific cause before they search or confiscate an electronic device.
The DHS and several courts in the U.S. have held these searches to be valid, saying the Border Search Exception under U.S. criminal law allows the government to conduct border searches at any time and for any reason, without the need for probable cause or even a lower reasonable cause standard.
From that standpoint, last week's ruling is a major victory, said Hanni Fakhoury, staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
"I am very happy to see the court adopt some standard and some limitation on the government's ability to search at borders," Fakhoury said. "It says the Fourth Amendment isn't just dead at the border."
The Ninth Circuit ruling is also important because it notes that simply because a computer might contain encrypted or password-protected files is not enough reason to conduct a detailed forensic search of the device.
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