SEPTEMBER 3, 2015 | BY NATE CARDOZO
Finally! DOJ Reverses Course and Requires Warrants for Stingrays!
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/09/finally-doj-reverses-course-and-will-get-warrants-stingrays
At long last, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has announced a
slew of much-needed policy changes regarding the use of cell-site
simulators. Most importantly, starting today all federal law
enforcement agencies—and all state and local agencies working with
the federal government—will be required to obtain a search warrant
supported by probable cause before they are allowed to use cell-site
simulators. EFF welcomes these policy changes as long overdue.
Colloquially known as “Stingrays” after Harris Corporation’s brand
name for a common model, cell-site simulators masquerade as
legitimate cell phone towers, tricking phones nearby into connecting
to them. This allows agents to learn the unique identifying number
for each phone in the area of the device and to track a phone’s
location in real time. But Stingrays can get a lot more than just
identifying numbers and location data—by virtue of the way they
work, all mobile traffic (voice, data, and text) from every phone in
the area could be routed through the Stingray, giving the operator
the option to do anything from recording entire calls and texts, to
selectively denying service to particular phones.
Until recently, law enforcement’s use of Stingrays has been shrouded
in an inexplicable and indefensible level of secrecy. At the behest
of the FBI, state law enforcement agencies have been bound by
non-disclosure agreements intended to shield from public scrutiny
all details about the technical capabilities and even model numbers
of the devices. Law enforcement has gone to extreme lengths to
protect even the most basic information about them, even dropping
charges rather than answering judges’ questions about them. Although
today’s policy changes don’t directly affect the non-disclosure
agreements already in place, the tone of the announcement, along
with a clarification from May, gives us hope that more transparency
is on the way.
What today’s changes do:
Federal law enforcement agents will be required to obtain a search
warrant supported by probable cause prior to using a cell-site
simulator in a law enforcement context. A search warrant requires a
showing by the agent, under oath, that meets one of the highest
standards in federal law. This incredibly important change is
precisely what EFF has been asking for.
Agents will only be allowed to use Stingrays in “pen register” mode,
meaning the devices will collect only the basic location of the
phone and the numbers of incoming and outgoing calls and texts.
Agents will not be allowed to collect the content of your
communications -- like your emails or text messages -- even if the
cell-site simulator is capable of such collection.
Finally, Agencies must delete data on users not targeted in either
24 hours or 30 days, depending on context.
What today’s changes don’t do:
The new policy isn’t law and doesn’t provide any remedy to people
whose data is swept up by Stingrays operated without a warrant.
Indeed, it won’t even act to keep evidence collected in violation of
the policy out of court (this is known as suppression).
The policy doesn’t apply to the use of Stingrays outside of the
criminal investigation context. For instance, when federal agents
use cell-site simulators for “national security” purposes, they
won’t be required to obtain a warrant by the terms of this policy.
There are two enumerated exceptions to the warrant requirement in
today’s guidance. The first is the traditional “exigent
circumstances” exception, common to all warrant requirements and not
particularly worrisome. But the second exception listed in today’s
policy for undefined “exceptional circumstances” is potentially
problematic. We have no idea what that means, so we’re waiting to
see if and how the exception will be used.
What more is needed:
While we’re pleasantly surprised by this long-needed first step to
bring Stingrays out of the shadows and into compliance with the
Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement, more is needed.
First and foremost, without a statute or court decision giving this
voluntary policy the force of law, there will be no consequences if
law enforcement agents flout its terms and continue using Stingrays
as they have—without warrants. With only this policy shielding us,
there’s nothing keeping warrantless Stingray evidence out of court,
and therefore nothing to deter agents from behaving badly.
And finally, we need to extend this warrant requirement to all state
and local law enforcement agencies around the country. Some states
(such as Washington) already have such laws in place. It’s time to
make the message clear to cops in all 50 states: if you want to use
a Stingray, get a warrant!
Files
doj_cell_site_simulator_policy_9-3-15.pdf