Local restaurants making their own policies on masks – 13abc Action News

The latest order by Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer leaves staff and business owners in a tough position.

Whitmer's newest order requires businesses to refuse entry to anyone not wearing masks, unless they are under five years old or have a medical condition. It's up to the business to enforce the rule

Pete's Garage has been operating in Monroe, Michigan for more than 40 years. The well-known restaurant, whose owners also run Michigan Bar & Grille, published a Facebook post that is taking heat online, even after being altered multiple times.

The restaurants original post stated:

IF YOU HAVE A MEDICAL CONDITION THAT PREVENTS YOU FROM WEARING A MASK, YOU DONT NEED TO WEAR ONE

IF YOU ARE NOT WEARING ONE, WE WILL ASSUME THIS IS THE CASE. DUE TO HIPPA, AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT, WE WILL NOT ASK YOU ABOUT YOUR CONDITION.

The restaurant has signs posted on the door for their new guidelines, which also include touchless URL menus on tables, seating 6-feet apart, and parties required to be less than 10 people.

Manager Brittany Van Riper says when it comes to medical conditions that may exempt a customer from wearing a mask, Theres no way of really telling, thats at the trust of our customers and the trust of our staff.

Michigan businesses failing to require masks could face a misdemeanor, a $500 fine, and possibly losing their license.

In Toledo, the Ottawa Tavern and other restaurants on Adams Street took a different approach, with their new slogan: "Mask on your face until your butt is in place."

Ottawa Tavern owner Zack Jacobs says he came up with the phrase. Jacobs says the new signage and blanket policies make the dining experience safer for staff and customers.

Face masks are also offered at the door, costing a dollar.

The official policy of all bars on Adams Street: Mask on your face til your butt is in place!

If you are a person who is compromised and unable to wear a face mask, then maybe going out in public during a pandemic isnt the wisest move for you to begin with, Jacobs said. Consider your own health and safety and making your own good choices for your health and safety before you step out into a local business thats just trying to stay open and serve our customers in a safe way.

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Local restaurants making their own policies on masks - 13abc Action News

Understanding ‘Qualified Immunity’ And Its Place In The Police Reform Debate – WBUR

One area of significant contention in the state senate's recently passed police reform bill was whether to limit "qualified immunity," a legal doctrine that protects police and other public employees from lawsuits.

Qualified immunity has been both a lightning rod in local and national police reform debates, and a source of confusion about what it actually entails.

We turn to Nancy Gertner, a retired federal judge, WBUR legal analyst and senior lecturer at Harvard Law School, on what qualified immunity is and why many law enforcement officials are trying to hold on to it.

On how the "qualified immunity" doctrine came about:

"The doctrine is a judge-made doctrine that came about in pretty much the late 1970s and early 1980s. And it was literally a concern that constitutional criminal law, in other words, the ways in which the Constitution limited or affected police behavior that it was unfair because of new developments in constitutional law, to have a police officer bound by those new developments. Famously, one judge said ... a cop on the beat shouldn't have to be reading the advance sheets (the ways in which people get notice of opinions). And it was really phrased in terms of a police officer could not anticipate legal developments. It was focused in on the big and new constitutional changes that were going on after the Warren Court and said, 'How could a police officer know about those kinds of changes?' But over time, it has evolved into something really quite a bit different. It's not just saying a police officer couldn't have known what the Supreme Court decided yesterday about the Fourth Amendment, but it has come to be that the police officer, for him to be held liable, there had to have been an existing precedent on the specific fact in question."

"Let me give you an example: There was a case of a SWAT team that fired tear gas grenades into a house carrying someone they wanted to arrest. That person wasn't there. That caused considerable damage. The Court of Appeals said, 'Well, there's no qualified immunity because there was no precedent involving tear gas and houses.' Now, there was precedent about the scope of searches, etc., but there was no specific precedent that dealt with ... tear gas going into a house, or a case of ... a police officer [who] shot a dog trying to apprehend someone in a backyard, and wound up shooting a young girl. And the court literally said that the child's right not to be accidentally shot in the leg is not clearly established. So [what] I'm saying is, over time this became not 'How could a police officer have known, you know, the latest constitutional issue,' but ... a police officer gets excused if there was not an existing precedent involving the facts that are in his case. Well, there never is an existing precedent involving those specific facts."

On why it's front and center in the current police reform debate:

"Well, what happens is that the 'immunity' entitles a judge to dismiss the case without it ever getting to a jury. While a jury ... might get the issue of what comprises excessive force or what comprises an unfair search, qualified immunity entitles a police officer who's being sued to move to dismiss, and the case is then gone. And it's gone in a way that is particularly troubling. The judge is supposed to decide, or at one point was supposed to decide, was the plaintiff's rights violated? And then the second question is, was the law clearly established? Over time, and because of the Supreme Court, judges no longer ... answer the first question: whether someone's rights were violated. So that meant the law is not ever going to be established even going forward, because case after case was saying, essentially, 'I don'tknow whether [the police officer] did anything wrong, but it wasn't clearly established.' "

On how qualified immunity plays out in lawsuits against law enforcement today:

"The notion that a police officer who does something that comprises a crime will be punished and go to jail is true, although we recognize that that doesn't happen very often, as we saw in the George Floyd case [with criminal charges]. But we're not talking about criminal prosecution here, because that, to some degree, is the most extreme example of wrongful conduct. We're talking about a civil suit, if someone violated your constitutional rights. It may not comprise a crime, but it was essentially violating your constitutional rights. ... [The police officer] did something wrong, he went outside the boundaries of what the Constitution allows. To say that people can sue, yeah, you can sue and it will be dismissed if it doesn't fit [these], in my view, absurd requirements. So it'll be dismissed. ... This is like constitutional malpractice. It's as if saying the only way you can deal with a doctor that left his instruments in your body after the surgery is if it's a crime. Well, we're not talking crime. We're talking about civil damages for violation of a constitutional right. So the fact that people can be sent to jail doesn't control conduct. What controls conduct is lawsuits."

On the argument that eliminating qualified immunity will put undue financial and civil risk on law enforcement, curb their behaviors, and make them overly cautious:

"It is a false argument. Ninety-nine point eight percent of cases that are brought I've looked this up of constitutional claims against police officers are paid for by the government or even sometimes the union. In other words, the municipality or the state will pay whatever damages are assigned to the police officer. So there is really no financial penalty at all. And what you're talking about is having a range of conduct that may well be wrong, that is broader than the range of conduct that we allow now, and allowing those cases to go to go to trial before a jury. So it's really not an impediment to the police at all, any more than malpractice since actions against doctors keep doctors from doing surgery. Good doctors do not have a problem [with that]."

On if the end of qualified immunity could affect police officers decisions:

"That's really the usual kind of scare tactics that the police use whenever there are efforts to curb their power. The fact that those who are engaged in malpractice like a doctor or a lawyer can be sued for it and wind up with damages against them, doesn't stop people to being doctors or lawyers. It makes them exercise more care. And that's exactly what we're trying to do. So that's just simply absurd. If they think twice before they violate someone's constitutional rights, rather than, as Justice Sotomayor just said in a case where she dissented, she says, with qualified immunity ... it's the wrong signal: shoot first and think later, and count on being exonerated."

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Understanding 'Qualified Immunity' And Its Place In The Police Reform Debate - WBUR

AG Rosenblum: Feds operating with no transparency – KOIN.com

A breakdown of the lawsuit against federal agencies over their protest response

by: Sheridan Kowta, KOIN 6 News Staff

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a lawsuit Friday against federal law enforcement agencies over the tactics they have used at protests while deployed in Portland, which includes allegedly seizing and detaining protesters without probable cause. On Sunday, she spoke with KOIN 6 News about the demands of the lawsuit and how she believes federal officers are escalating the violence.

I think every American needs to be concerned about whats happening here in Portland. These federal agencies are operating with no transparency and against the will of just about every leader in our state, Rosenblum said. We took a look at this because things seemed, by Friday morning, not to be improving.

Part of the lawsuit includes a request for declarations that the tactics used by federal agents are in violation of both the First Amendment and the Fourth Amendment.

We are asking that there be a declaration that their conduct, that their tactics are in violation of the First Amendment: peoples rights to protest, peoples rights to be on the streets, to be declaring their opposition to police brutality, to racial injustices, said Rosenblum. And so, that is what is known as a prior restraint on a persons right to conduct themselves publicly in this manner under the First Amendment.

Rosenblum referenced unreasonable seizures in instances where people were allegedly grabbed off the street and put in unmarked rental carsa story first published by Oregon Public Broadcasting.

These are not people who are being found to be engaging in illegal conduct at the time that they are grabbed. In fact, one young man was just simply walking home after the protestMr. Pettibone, whose affidavit is included in our complaint that we filed, said Rosenblum.

She said the lawsuit specifically asks for a ruling from the court that permanently restrains federal officers from engaging in these tactics and requires them to do three things:

Not to arrest individuals without probable cause or a warrant; identifying themselves and their agency before detaining or arresting anyone; explaining to any person detained or arrested that the person is being detained or arrested and the basis for the action, Rosenblum said.

This is a very straight-forward lawsuit, she said.

It was filed Friday night, and her office also plans to file a motion for a temporary restraining order in the coming days.

We believe strongly that the deployment of federal law enforcement in Portland has nothing to do with public safety and in fact, is actually escalating the dangerous situation here in our town and we wanted to do something to try to help, said Rosenblum.

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AG Rosenblum: Feds operating with no transparency - KOIN.com

Letter to the editor: What next for Black Lives Matter? – The Topeka Capital-Journal

FridayJul17,2020at1:00PM

Tactical maneuvers such as Defunding the Police (which primarily means moving some money that goes toward law enforcement to investing in social programs to help disadvantaged and marginalized communities that are most heavily policed, thus removing the need for such heavy policing) is a good first step.

Removing statues and other symbols of oppression is also an important step, when done in ways that dont result in backlash.

But what about the criminal justice system? What about Supreme Court decisions that have effectively gutted Fourth Amendment protections or Fourteenth Amendment guarantees for young men of color? What about the devils bargain between the war on drugs and the private prison industry that imprisons young men, burdens them with debt once they are released, makes it difficult for them to find jobs, and disenfranchises them?

What is needed is a comprehensive strategy that addresses all of these concerns. I am sure there are national experts and leaders who are working on such a comprehensive approach and who could be brought to Topeka to help educate us on what we can do locally.

The extent to which young people have recently been galvanized to address racism is one of the most positive things Ive seen in years. It would be nice if student groups at Washburn University and more established community organizations, such as Topeka Center for Peace and Justice, could be brought together.

Our younger generations have the energy, and other established organizations in Topeka and Shawnee County have the experience that if combined could have a positive and lasting impact on our community.

Duane Johnson, Topeka

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Letter to the editor: What next for Black Lives Matter? - The Topeka Capital-Journal

Why Are Columbus Officers Rarely Indicted? Grand Jury Instructions Raise The Bar – WOSU

A grand jury last year indicted former Columbus Police Vice officer Andrew Mitchell on charges of murder and voluntary manslaughter for killing Donna Castleberry. It was first time in two decades that a Franklin County grand jury voted to indict an officer for fatally shooting a civilian.

Mitchell's case was also the first successful police-shooting indictment during the 24-year tenure of Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O'Brien, who's tasked with considering all cases of Columbus officers using lethal force against a civilian.

Whenever a grand jury decides whether to press charges, OBrien says the bar is high.

You cant look back with 20/20 hindsight about what the officer should have done, when they had a split second to make that decision, he says. And certainly thats broader than the normal self-defense.

That bar is raised even higher by the instructions given to a grand jury immediately before they decide whether to indict an officerinstructions not provided when the accused is a civilian.

According to a three-page document read by the administrative judge, The Fourth Amendment does not require police officers to wait until a suspect shoots to confirm that a serious threat of harm exists.

Benefit Of The Doubt

Those grand jury instructions come from two U.S. Supreme Court cases and one local Ohio case.

InTennessee vs. Garner(1985), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an officer may use deadly force to prevent the escape of a fleeing suspect. InGraham vs. Connor(1989), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an "objective reasonableness" standard must apply to any civilian claim of excessive force by police.

And inState vs. White(2015), the Ohio Supreme Court ruled thatfirearm specificationis not applicable to an on-duty police officer acting within the course and scope of law enforcement.

According to the last portion of the grand jury instructions, officers need not be absolutely sure [of] the suspect's intent to cause them harmthe Constitution does not require that certitude precede the act of self-protection. Rather, it is the perceived threat of attack by a suspect, apart from the actual attack, to which the officer may respond preemptively.

During recent police cases, the person charged with reading those words to grand juries is Administrative Judge Stephen McIntosh.

Fortunately or unfortunately, generally if someone in law enforcement is indicating that they were somehow placed in fear based on the circumstances that were presented, that jurors be willing to give them the benefit of the doubt, McIntosh says.

Grand juries deliberating shooting cases that do not involve officers do not receive similar instructions.

In an email from the Franklin County Prosecutors office, a spokesperson explained, According to Ohio Revised Code Chapter 2939, both the testimony of witnesses and legal instructions in a grand jury proceeding are secret.

"They Are Protected At Every Step"

Tammy Fournier Alsaada, a longtime activist with the Peoples Justice Project, argues that benefit of the doubt goes too far. During recent cases, she says the process protected officers from facing consequences for killing civilians.

Ive been in the process," Alsaada says. "You dont think I went with Henry Green and Tyree King and Jaron Thomas family? I know that process inside and out. And I know they are protected at every step and every decision point.

Henry Green, 23, was fatally shot by Columbus Police officers Zachary Rosen and Jason Bare, both of whom were wearing plainclothes, in June 2016. In September of the same year, Columbus officer Bryan Mason fatally shot 13-year-oldTyre King, who was carrying a BB gun, while investigating a robbery.

In 2017,Jaron Thomas, a 36-year-old with schizophrenia, died in Columbus Police custody after a cocaine-induced hallucination prompted him to call police for help.

Alsadda says the nature of these hearings tilt toward officers, and the families and attorneys of victims don't get a fair shot.

Sean Walton represented all three of those families, Alsaada says. Did they get an opportunity for Sean to go in that room? Did they get an opportunity for full representation? No. I watched a whole FOP [Fraternal Order of Police] walk in the room and defend Rosen and Officer Bare on Henry Green.

During grand jury proceedings, Walton says the prosecutor and their witnesses the only people allowed in the room, other than the jury members. Meanwhile, Walton stands in the hallways with families while the case is being decided.

We have no information about the grand jury process, Walton says. Were pretty much there for moral support.

In the cases of King and Green, Franklin County grand juries declined to indict the officers involved, saying the use of deadly forces were reasonable. O'Brien's office did not present Thomas' case to a grand jury after the county coroner ruled the death wasaccidental.

Considering Other Charges

OBrien contends that officers killing civilians is not the same as a civilian killing someone in self-defense.

They do provide the officer a broad authority to use force, up until and including deadly force, and do provide protection, if thats the right word, for the officer in the use of force, OBrien says.

McIntosh adds that murder is not the only option for grand juries in police cases. He says it's crucial that grand juries are aware of all possible charges in a particular case.

One of the things I always instruct the grand jurors at their orientation as well as these, that theyre to ask the prosecutor for every possible charge that can be filed, because sometimes it does not fit neatly into a murder charge, McIntosh says.

In 2016, McIntosh chaired a task force that sought to bring about grand jury reforms in Ohio.

One critique of the traditional grand jury does, however, expose a potential downside of secrecy: losing public confidence in the process, states the report overview. Not knowing what information is presented to a grand jury can lead to speculation which may or may not be well-founded.

For years, the Peoples Justice Project and other activists havecalledfor police shooting cases to be taken away from OBrien and given to anindependent investigator. This June, Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther issued anexecutive orderthat requires all cases of police fatal use-of-force and deaths in police custody to be referred to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation.

WOSU reached out to the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 9 for comment but did not hear back.

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Why Are Columbus Officers Rarely Indicted? Grand Jury Instructions Raise The Bar - WOSU

Pew survey shows need to educate the public about policing – Police News

The very title of the recently released Pew Research Center report, Majority of Public Favors Giving Civilians the Power to Sue Police Officers for Misconduct, is an indicator of how poorly civil leaders have communicated to the public about the central function of their governments. (Report available in full below). It may also explain the rush to outlaw qualified immunity if the voting public thinks that this longstanding legal precedent bars civil actions against police misconduct.

The survey also measured public support for defunding police and confidence that police are doing a good job, and support for proposals such as a national databaseof misconduct and civilian oversight.

As significant as the numbers may be, the most compelling insight from the study is the significant differences in opinions between races, ages and political affiliation.

Surveys of perception and opinion are just that they are not designed to measure the facts of an issue. Political leaders and police leadership must decide to operate on facts about an issue rather than public misconceptions, no matter how widespread or popular they are. The much more difficult task is educating the public on the facts, rather than basing legislation on a trending emotional state.

Popular political and mass media narrative over the past several years may be the cause for a drop in overall positive ratings for law enforcement when comparing this reports findings to a Pew report published in 2017, which also showed a partisan gap in favorability toward police.

Republicans and Democrats alike believe that the average police officer discharges his or her service firearm while on duty at least once during the course of their career (84% and 86%, respectively). But Democrats (39%) are more likely than Republicans and independents (27% each) to say that an average officer uses his or her service weapon at least a few times a year. Here, however, differences do appear to be driven by race: Only 22% of white Democrats say that an average officer discharges his or her weapon at least a few times a year, which is statistically not different from the 26% of white Republicans who say this. (For their part, 72% ofpolice officers say they havenever fired their weaponon duty outside of training, a separate survey of officers found.)

This finding is a good example of the disconnect between the facts of real life in policing and the perceptions of the public doubtlessly derived from fictional portrayals of fact-deprived activists and commentators.

An aggregate 90%+ of respondents want police trained in non-violent alternatives to deadly force. If this reflects a belief by the majority of Americans that current police officers are not being trained in force alternatives, it is one measure of the vast disconnect between reality and perception. While this disconnect is frustrating in itself, the manifestation of these false beliefs into law and policy is fraught with tragedy.

One place that police advocates can lend an educated voice to the debate on police reform is the topic of qualified immunity. If the Pew survey results are any indication, there may be a widespread belief that qualified immunity is the ultimate hall pass for police officers to engage in unreasonable and illegal behavior by virtue of just doing their job.

The public must know that this type of immunity has a narrow application to situations in which the officer is duty-bound to act and makes a decision that is subsequently found by the courts to have been unlawful but was not clearly established at the time of the officers decision. In other words, there is a thin layer of protection for an officer making high-stakes decisions that will be ruled on many years after the consequences by layers of judges and court proceedings. Judges who, by the way, enjoy nearly absolute immunity far removed from the reality of the moment.

Despite the very real fear of lawsuits, the courts have repeatedly ruled that decisions during dangerous, stressful and time-compressed events must be reviewed in a way that gives reasonable allowance for discretion and error: The Fourth Amendment requires government officials to act reasonably, not perfectly, and gives those officials fair leeway for enforcing the law,seeHeien v. North Carolina.

Every police officer knows that, while they may be indemnified by their employer, they are not immune from personal financial liability in a lawsuit. That lawsuit can happen on the federal level if deprivation of constitutional rights is alleged and it can happen on the state level if negligence or an intentional tort is alleged. Criminal charges on both the state and federal levels may be filed as clearly evidenced in recent high-profile prosecutions of police officers.

Department discipline including loss of job and inability to remain in law enforcement in any capacity is also a penalty facing officers every day with every decision. The notion that police officers are immune from accountability could not be farther from the truth despite public perception.

The Pew research holds great value for informed police leaders and advocates to get a grasp of the huge educational task ahead of them. The good news is that there are very few persons seriously advocating for defunding police agencies, which means there is leverage to continue appealing to public support using persuasive facts.

The partisan and racial divide is not explained by the data on actual police conduct that has been accumulated over the years. National databases will be making the picture of police conduct clearer in the coming years, but laws and policies based on false perceptions will happen before these new sources of information are mined. This calls for a massive effort to regain the publics confidence through repeated discussion of facts, calling out those who have loud voices that seek to drown out the facts.

Pew Research Report on Publ... by Ed Praetorian on Scribd

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Pew survey shows need to educate the public about policing - Police News

Medias games with the White House are by design – Boston Herald

Anyone who has been tuning in to the televised press briefings has heard White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany refer to journalistic curiosity or more specifically, the lack thereof.

But make no mistake, the press is far from lazy or uninterested.

In fact, the media has never been sharper.

Dont let their constant mistakes fool you.

Whether it is a Washington Post retraction or a blue checkmarks Twitter correction those errors are not the result of a sloppy press.

They are the result of a determined one.

The media knows exactly what it is doing. And if youve been paying attention, then you do, too.

If reporters are failing to dig deeper into certain issues, it is not due to laziness.

On the contrary, when the news outlets bend over backward to ignore a story, you can rest assured they are extremely interested in it.

For example, if we were living in a normal, non-President Trump world, the unmasking of Gen. Michael Flynn would be a massive story.

The FBI framing a four-star general as part of a plan to overthrow a duly-elected president well, it makes Watergate look like childs play.

Instead, the press puts on a weak performance for their dwindling Trump-Deranged audience.

Rather than veer from their Get Trump narrative, they pretend they dont understand what all the fuss is about.

In May, CBS News Radio correspondent Steven Portnoy asked the press secretary, What the president calls Obamagate, what is it? What are the elements of that crime?

As convincing as he might be, furrowed brow and all, this reporter is far from a dolt.

Portnoy likely knows far more than most about Obamagate.

But his question is effective for his base. It reaffirms the idea that Trump is a paranoid nut in the White House who is obsessed with made-up scandals.

Unfortunately for the confused Portnoy, McEnany had no issues breaking down the criminal elements of what took place in the scandal-free Obama administration.

Look, there were a number of questions raised by the actions of the Obama administration. The Steele dossier, funded by the Democratic National Committee, an opposition political party to the president, was used to attain FISA warrants to listen in on conversations of people within the Trump campaign. There was the unmasking of the identity of Michael Flynn.

She later went on to say, We know that the identity of this three-decade general was leaked to the press a criminal leak to the press of his identity in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.

Is it any wonder that McEnany finished off her response by informing Portnoy that his question was only the second she received about the topic?

In law, the rule of thumb is that you dont ask a question you dont already know the answer to.

In todays media, it is a bit more sinister Dont ask a question you dont want the American people to hear the answer to.

It is the same reason the media can whip themselves into a lather over the number of scoops of ice cream the president is eating but has little to no interest in Tara Reade.

Their job is deciding what stories are considered important in the mainstream.

Right now, nothing is more critical in the minds of Chuck Todd and Jake Tapper than taking down Trump.

So they write their think pieces about Russian agents and fake dossiers.

They obsess over Stormy Daniels and how Trump drinks his water.

And by avoiding asking real questions, they never get real answers thus avoiding some big problems for their preferred candidate.

Speaking of, when Joe Biden finally drifts his way over to a podium, the press gives him an open mic to remind America that Orange Man is indeed still bad.

Journalists wield a powerful tool.

They can bring scandals to the forefront of Americas news cycle.

But perhaps more powerful than that, they can shove stories into the background.

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Medias games with the White House are by design - Boston Herald

Gross Sexual Imposition in Ohio – Legal Reader

If you face Ohio gross sexual imposition charges, a sex crimes lawyer provides you with the best opportunity of reducing or eliminating your criminal charges.

Gross sexual imposition (GSI) occurs when a person has sexual contact with another person that is against the other persons will. Sexual contact, for the purposes of a GSI crime, includes the touching of another persons genital area, thigh, buttocks, or breast.

In Ohio, charges in GSI cases must be filed within 20 years from the date of the alleged incident.

If you face gross sexual imposition charges in Ohio, you should contact a Columbus sex crimes attorney as soon as possible.

Ohios Definition of Gross Sexual Imposition

Ohio law defines gross sexual imposition as:

However, for the accuseds conduct to constitute gross sexual imposition, the sexual contact must take place in one of the following circumstances:

Additionally, gross sexual imposition may occur when the victim was under the age of 12 and the accused touched the victim for the purpose of abusing, humiliating, harassing, degrading, or gratifying the sexual desire of any person.

Punishments

The punishments for gross sexual imposition charges include jail time, fines, and sex offender registration.

Jail Time and Fines

Depending on the circumstances of your case, gross sexual imposition in Ohio is punishable as a fourth-degree or third-degree felony.

It is a fourth-degree felony when:

A fourth-degree felony carries a punishment of six to eight months in jail and up to a $5,000 fine.

Ohio Gross sexual imposition is a third-degree felony when:

A third-degree felony carries a maximum of 60 months in jail and up to a $10,000 fine.

Sex Offender Registration

A person convicted of gross sexual imposition in Ohio will have to register as either a Tier I, II, or III sex offender, depending on the facts of their case.

Tier I sex offenders must register as sex offenders annually for 15 years. Tier II sex offenders must register every six months for 25 years. Tier III sex offenders must register every 90 days for the remainder of their life.

Additionally, all sex offenders must register with their local sheriffs office:

Furthermore, sex offender registration can make it harder to find employment and housing and to get into higher education programs.

Difference from Sexual Imposition

Sexual imposition is a less serious crime than gross sexual imposition. In Ohio, it is a third-degree misdemeanor that carries a punishment of up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. Unlike gross sexual imposition, sexual imposition does not involve situations where the use or threat of force took place.

Sexual imposition can occur in the following circumstances:

If you face sexual imposition charges, you should still contact a sex crimes lawyer.

Defenses

Two common defenses that may be available in Ohio gross sexual imposition cases include the violation of your constitutional rights and false accusations.

The Police Violated Your Constitutional Rights

Under the Fourth Amendment, police generally need a warrant to search you or seize your property. If police obtained text messages, videos, photographs, or other digital evidence through an unlawful search or seizure, the evidence might be excluded.

Youve Been Falsely Accused

Most of the time, sex crimes are based on the word of the accuser against your word. If you believe you were wrongly accused of a GSI crime, contact a sex crimes lawyer. A lawyer can investigate your case and strive to prove your innocence.

Why You Should Contact a Sex Crimes Lawyer

If you face Ohio gross sexual imposition charges, a sex crimes lawyer provides you with the best opportunity of reducing or eliminating your criminal charges. Our attorneys at Joslyn Law Firm have substantial experience in many types of sex crimes cases. We understand the effect a gross sexual imposition accusation can have on your relationships with family, friends, and employers. We provide aggressive legal defense and will raise any defenses applicable to your case. Contact us today to schedule your confidential consultation.

By Brian Joslyn

Contact Joslyn Law Firm for legal assistance, questions, or representation.

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Gross Sexual Imposition in Ohio - Legal Reader

United States v. Gratkowski Beware of Inanimate Objects That Violate Your Privacy – JD Supra

In Philip K. Dicks novel Ubik, the sci-fi legend warned the world of the dangers of inanimate objects that could violate our privacy.[1] In a virtual nod to Ubik and Dick, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the privacy protections of the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution do not apply to records of Bitcoin transactions held by a major digital asset trading platform. Faced with the novel question of whether an individual has a Fourth Amendment privacy interest in the records of their Bitcoin transactions, the Fifth Circuit, in United States v. Gratkowski, found that Bitcoin data akin to bank records does not have a constitutional right to privacy or unreasonable search.

In United States v. Gratkowski, federal agents analyzed the publicly viewable Bitcoin blockchain and subpoenaed a leading digital asset trading platform for all information on the customers of the trading platform whose accounts had sent Bitcoin to a child-pornography website. In response to the subpoena, the trading platform identified Gratkowski as one of these customers. Federal agents then obtained a search warrant for Gratkowkis house, which resulted in the discovery of child pornography in his possession.

Generally, a person must have a reasonable expectation of privacy in an item for Fourth Amendment protections to attach.[2] Under the third-party doctrine, a person generally has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.[3] Gratkowski argued that his Bitcoin information should receive the same protections as those set out in Carpenter v. United States, which expanded Fourth Amendment protections by limiting the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones.[4]

Relying on the United States Supreme Courts ruling in Carpenter,[5] which limited the applicability of the third-party doctrine in the context of cell phones, Gratkowski claimed that the federal agents infringed upon his Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches. Gratkowski argued the Government violated his reasonable expectation of privacy in the records of his Bitcoin transactions recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain that were executed at the crypto trading platform.

The Fifth Circuit, affirmed the decision of the district court, rejected Gratkowskis argument, and concluded the information on the Bitcoin blockchain is analogous to bank records which are subject to the third-party doctrine and not protected under the Fourth Amendment. The court reasoned that like bank records, the Bitcoin blockchain identifies (1) the amount of Bitcoin transferred, (2) the Bitcoin address of the sending party, and (3) the Bitcoin address of the receiving party. The court also opined that since every Bitcoin user has access to the public Bitcoin blockchain which is a not a permission based distributed ledger technology and can see every Bitcoin address and its respective transfers, Bitcoin users are unlikely to expect that this information will be kept private.

The Fifth Circuit also held the records at the digital asset trading platform were akin to bank records, finding no reason for treating these records and records at other trading platforms any differently than traditional banks. The court reasoned the trading platform and traditional banks both are subject to the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) as regulated financial institutions, whose records provide only limited information about a persons virtual currency transactions. The court also suggested that Bitcoin users have the option to maintain a higher level of privacy by transacting without a third-party intermediary exchange, albeit this would require greater technical expertise.

Despite the fact that Bitcoin users enjoy a greater degree of privacy than those who use other money-transfer means, transaction information under this ruling is not protected under the Fourth Amendment. It is unclear how the Fifth Circuit would have ruled if the defendants data had been stored in a permissioned blockchain. However, the determination of the court that a digital asset trading platform is deemed a financial institution, does not bode well for the argument that digital assets stored on a permissioned blockchain will be protected by the Fourth Amendment.

The Fifth Circuits conclusion that the records of crypto currency trading platforms are not protected by the Fourth Amendment because the trading platform is a regulated financial institution could also possibly open the door to the argument that records maintained by digital asset trading platforms are subject to the protections of the federal Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 (RFPA).[6] Subject to certain limitations such as national security subpoenas, RFPA requires federal government officials to follow certain procedures when seeking customer financial information from a financial institution. RFPA also requires financial institutions to take a number of steps before releasing the information. The customer must receive a written notice of the governments desire to obtain the records, the customer must be told why the records are being requested, and the customer must told the steps they can take to protect the information. RFPA includes a number of exceptions to when the customer must be given notice and places restrictions on a customers ability to prevent the information from being released.

If digital asset trading platforms are deemed financial institutions by virtue of being subject to the BSA, the records of clients at such institutions may be subject to the protections of RFPA discussed above.

[1] Philip K. Dick, Ubik (196); see also April Glaser, Philip K. Dick Warned Us About the Internet of Things in 1969, Slate (Feb. 10, 2015), available at: https://slate.com/technology/2015/02/philip-k-dick-s-1969-novel-ubik-on-the-internet-of-things.html.

[2] United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400, 406 (2012)

[3] Smith v. Maryland, 442 U.S. 735, 74344 (1979)

[4] 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018),

[5] Carpenter v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 2206, 2217 (2018)

[6] 12 U.S.C. ch. 35, 3401 et seq.

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United States v. Gratkowski Beware of Inanimate Objects That Violate Your Privacy - JD Supra

OPINION: Weed should regulate its surveillance – News – Mount Shasta Herald

Take a drive throughout the town of Weed and youll surely come across odd looking cameras topped with a blinking blue light. Theyre primarily intended for traffic monitoring, one city employee told me. But their pervasiveness without an accompanying city ordinance has gone on too long and the city risks jeopardizing its citizens civil liberties.

One of the more prominent of these cameras is mounted to a telephone pole on Main Street. From its vantage point, the main street camera is particularly concerning for its possible ability to surveil regular goers to the nearby dispensary, bar, and bank. Some months ago, a camera was mounted at the intersection of Broadway and Roseburg overlooking a historically African-American predominant residential area.

While the intention to monitor traffic is merited, there is an unfortunate propensity for these technologies to expand in their reach and scope. In San Diego, for example, the city council in 2016 sold the public on a new smart streetlight program. Armed with an array of sensors, the street lights feature wide angle cameras and the ability to upload collected data to a cloud storage database.

The City of San Diego applauded the smart street lights for their energy efficiency and future applications in regards to improving traffic, saying the lights would help City staff provide better services to our residents and increase efficiencies for City operations.

But, the mission creep settled in quickly. In 2019 reports surfaced that San Diegos contract with the streetlight vendor, General Electric, allowed unrestricted rights to the data gathered by the cameras and sensors, including the right to sell the data to third parties.

By early 2020, it was clear that the San Diego police were not even using the streetlights for the primary purpose of traffic control or monitoring, but instead were looking into alleged criminal activity. Then, in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests in June of 2020, police used the cameras to investigate protestors. This type of surveillance can have a considerable chilling effect on First Amendment activity.

Though it is of course desirable for police to effectively utilize the tools at their disposal, this much is clear: with a poor regulatory regime, no oversight, and little transparency, the benign traffic monitoring cameras went above and beyond their explicitly stated purpose. And it does not help that some vendors specifically market their wares to city officials as enabling infrastructure by hosting third party sensors. Meaning, that other sensors and software can be incorporated later.

It would have been prudent for the City of Weed to have had a privacy policy in place prior to the acquisition of surveillance technology. For starters, there is virtually no transparency on the issue; information related to it is not readily available. A search of the words camera, surveillance, or privacy on the City of Weeds website returns no pages nor documents. Compare that with the gold standard set by the City of Oakland, which has its policies enshrined as a dedicated chapter in its municipal code.

Policy 378 of the Weed Police Department Policy Manual does have a section on a Public Safety Video Surveillance System. The policy deserves kudos for specifying that the cameras should be conspicuous, and that they will not record audio, but otherwise the policy is neglectful for its porous standards.

Proponents of the cameras might counter that these are only keeping an eye on the public thoroughfare; there is no expectation of privacy, and therefore it would not be a Fourth Amendment violation, per se. But as the California State Auditor once noted, [The United States Supreme Court] has decided cases involving other electronic surveillance [...] the court has found that certain electronic data that reveal individuals movements over an extended period of time, if gathered, do at some point impinge on privacy.

Even in public, there still needs to be a concern over surveillance.

Furthermore, there is nothing stopping the Weed Police Department (WPD) from acquiring more invasive technology. Policy 378.3.3 says it can integrate its video surveillance equipment with gunshot detection, incident mapping, crime analysis, license plate recognition, facial recognition and other video-based analytical systems may be considered based upon availability and the nature of department strategy.

Not only has gunshot detection, facial recognition, predictive policing, and license plate recognition systems come under fire for being flawed and having negative impacts on civil liberties, but in the WPDs response to an inquiry from the California State Auditor, WPD said that there are no plans to use an automated license plate recognition system. If this is the case, then why do they need a surveillance system capable of doing so?

The video retention policies stand out as another big risk. Absent of being used in litigation, Policy 378.5 says that the retention schedule [is] a minimum of one year. However, the media is seemingly not regularly cleared automatically after that time as the city attorney needs to explicitly sign off before the video can be deleted.

This is not to say that the City of Weeds efforts up to this point have been in bad faith. Rather, given that the city now has these technologies at their disposal, it is imperative that guidelines are made now to prevent future abuse. Without specific policies there is no guarantee that the civil liberties of the residents are being respected. The genie must be kept in its bottle. An ordinance requiring city council approval for the acquisition of surveillance technology and mandated standards is needed.

Jonathan Hofer was born and raised in Weed. He is a former political science researcher at the University of California, Berkeley and currently works as a research associate at an Oakland based public policy think tank working on municipal surveillance and the impact of emerging technologies on civil liberties.

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OPINION: Weed should regulate its surveillance - News - Mount Shasta Herald

The Senate’s twin threats to online speech and security – Brookings Institution

This is a cruel summer. The COVID-19 toll increases daily. Millions are out of work and risk losing their homes. The senseless loss of Black lives continues despite weeks of mass protests. Behind it all lurks the climate crisis. Amid these pressing issues, members of the Senate have decided to spend their time creating their own threat to Americans: legislation that would make Americans less safe, while simultaneously harming online speech, privacy, and encryption.

This threat comes in the form of two bills: the Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies Act, which the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously voted to advance out of committee last week; and the Lawful Access to Encrypted Data Act, which was introduced the prior week by Sen. Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican, who is also a co-sponsor of EARN IT. The EARN IT Act is described as an attempt to crack down on child sexual abuse material online but ends up drastically undermining user security and privacy in the process. The LAED Act, meanwhile, represents an attempt to outright ban strong encryption technology.

Taken together, the two measures represent a serious threat to online security, and the LAED Acts outlandishness, timing, and lack of bipartisan support have been interpreted to mean that it is a go-nowhere bill intended to make EARN IT look reasonable by comparison. Thats no excuse. The LAED Act doesnt make the EARN IT Act OK. Both of these bills threaten core freedoms online, and moving an attack on encryption from one bill to another is not progress.

LAED is no less than a nuclear assault on encryption in the United States, and, by extension, on security, privacy, and speech online. By modifying the legal framework for search warrants and electronic surveillance, LAED would make encryption backdoors mandatory. It would ban providers in the U.S. from offering end-to-end encryption, encrypted devices that cannot be unlocked for law enforcement, and indeed any encryption that does not build in a means of decrypting data for the police. Security researchers and civil-rights advocates have long feared the introduction of such a radical bill, and now its finally here.

But the hard-line approach of the LAED Act is no reason to endorse the EARN IT Act, which could result in many of the same consequences as the LAED Act, if in a more roundabout way.

The EARN IT Act targets Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which makes online platforms largely immune from liability for the actions of their users and bars most state criminal charges and civil lawsuits (but not federal criminal law enforcement). It was designed to give platforms a free hand in moderating user content by shielding their decisions about what to leave up and what to take down. The law thus protects free speech online by removing the incentive to suppress users speech in response to all-too-common false accusations or threats of litigation.

By narrowing the scope of Section 230 immunity to no longer include child sexual abuse material (CSAM) uploaded by users, EARN IT incentivizes platforms to quash legal user speech in the hopes of avoiding lawsuits. Thats what happened after Congress passed the FOSTA statute in 2018, which carved out sex trafficking offenses from Section 230 immunity. When FOSTA became law, websites such as Craigslist immediately shut down parts of their services, purging large swaths of innocuous content (such as online personals) just in case something in there could get the platform accused of facilitating sex trafficking. Its like a library burning all its romance novels and medical textbooks lest one be deemed obscene. This chilling effect on online speech is why FOSTA is currently being challenged in court for violating the First Amendment.

Its important to fight horrific images and videos of child abuse online, which is why federal law already requires platforms to report it when they find out about it. But EARN IT would expose platforms to liability even for content they dont know about, by excepting a wide array of civil and criminal claims under state laws, some of which impose liability for reckless or negligent behaviora lower bar than the federal reporting laws actual knowledge standard. That carve-out is broader than FOSTAs exception for sex trafficking.

EARN IT recently passed out of committee following major revisions, but those changes, including an amendment by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), may make EARN IT a more dangerous bill. The managers amendment of EARN IT, coupled with Leahys amendment, responded to concerns that the bill had constitutional defects, would effectively ban strong encryption, and would force platforms to weaken their user privacy and security protections. Instead of solving those issues, however, the revised bill still has immense practical and constitutional problems.

Like FOSTA, EARN IT has a fundamental First Amendment problem. But EARN ITs problem is worse: By exposing platforms to liability under a patchwork of state CSAM laws, EARN IT would let the most aggressive states set the rules for the entire Internet. To avoid incurring liability under those laws, platforms would (as with FOSTA) take down large amounts of legal user content lest some illegal CSAM sneak through. CSAM is a persistent, complex challenge for platforms. While they report it millions of times a year, they have still been accused of not doing enough to combat it, and EARN ITs stated goal is to incentivize them to do more. But scaring platforms into censoring lots of protected speech is an unconstitutional way for Congress to achieve that goal.

Whats more, EARN IT raises serious concerns under the Fourth Amendment and risks undermining prosecution of real-world predators and purveyors of CSAM. The state laws unleashed by EARN IT may, explicitly or implicitly, force platforms to scan all user content for CSAM. When done voluntarily (as many platforms already do), this is permissible. If done at government behest, however, the platform becomes an arm of the state, rendering those scans warrantless searches that violate the Fourth Amendmentmeaning any CSAM evidence they turn up will be inadmissible in court. This was a clear problem in the original bill thanks to a carrot-and-stick incentive structure that has now been removed. Now, the bill punts the liability question to the statesand if some of them require scanning all content to avoid liability, or if platforms can only avoid charges of negligence or recklessness by scanning, then compliance still risks turning providers into agents of the state.

The potential stakes are high. Exclusion of evidence in CSAM prosecutions would make it harder to obtain a conviction for a hideous crime. If the senators who unanimously voted this bill out of committee care so much about online child safety, why are they willing to roll the dice on whether the bill will backfire and result in accused CSAM offenders going free?

The Leahy amendment attempts to neutralize concerns about EARN ITs impact on encryption and cybersecurity by preserving immunity from CSAM claims based on the platforms use of encryption. This does not go far enough. The amendment has been called a fig leaf that will merely tie up platforms in litigation. It could also lead platforms to either encrypt everything they can, making detection of CSAM more difficult, or else collect much more private information from their users. Plus, platforms could still be held liable for other measures besides encryption that they take to protect users security (or for refusing to implement measures that would undermine it).

LAED, however, renders Leahys effort superfluous. By outlawing platforms from giving users strong encryption, LAED would swallow Leahys EARN IT amendment. And the LAED bill applies even more broadly than EARN IT, encompassing everything from websites and social media platforms, to apps, email, messaging and chat, videoconferencing and voice calling apps, cloud storage, operating systems, and any electronic device with at least 1 gigabyte of storagea very low bar in 2020.

Any provider of encrypted devices or services that is moderately popularmeaning 1 million or more U.S. customerswould have to redesign its encryption to add a law enforcement backdoor. For smaller providers, the U.S. attorney general (a position currently occupied by the notoriously anti-encryption Bill Barr) would get the power to command them to add in a decryption capability.

The rationale for mandating backdoors is so that if an entity receives legal process requiring it to decrypt data for law enforcement, it will be able to comply. But a backdoor is just a hole by another name. What Graham is proposing isnt merely to make law enforcements job easier. Its to mandate security vulnerabilities in the devices and services we rely on to keep our electronic data and communications private and secure.

The problem with backdoors is that they cant be limited to just the good guys. Theyll also be found and exploited by the bad guys: nation-states, hackers, cybercriminals, organized crime. Under Grahams bill, we wouldnt know who might be exploiting those intentional vulnerabilities to snoop through our electronic data and listen in on our conversations. That has ramifications for free speech, not just privacy. Fear of surveillance chills how people express themselves online. Thats why millions of people, including members of Congress and their staff, use end-to-end encrypted apps such as Signal and WhatsApp to communicate for perfectly legitimate, law-abiding purposes: They feel safer speaking their thoughts when they can be sure no uninvited guests are listening in.

By mandating backdoors that will be used by good guys and bad guys alike, the LAED Act is a grave threat not only to privacy, free speech, and cybersecurity, but also to the economy and national security. A backdoor mandate is a gift to the foreign adversaries that are constantly attacking Americas cyber defenses. Strong encryption was crucial to Americas and Americans security before, and it is even more so now, with COVID-19 shifting much of our lives online.

Its time for lawmakers to stop making ill-conceived threats against Americans cybersecurity, privacy, and online speech rightsespecially with proposals that will create grave new harms themselves. Graham and his Senate colleagues are merely exacerbating the multiple crises ravaging the country, including the silent killer that has taken over 130,000 American lives so far this year. Congress should spend the balance of this legislative session focusing on those towering infernos and stop throwing more fuel on the fire.

Riana Pfefferkorn is the associate director of surveillance and cybersecurity at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society.

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The Senate's twin threats to online speech and security - Brookings Institution

Two Years of Carpenter – Lexology

Last month marks two years since the Supreme Court held, in Carpenter v. United States, that the Fourth Amendment applies to cell phone company records that detail a cell phone users location and movements. Under Carpenter, police are generally required to use a warrant to obtain seven days or more of a users cell-site location information from phone companies.

As we previously reported, Carpenter redefined how the Fourth Amendment applies to information held by technology companies in the digital age. Prior to Carpenter, the Court applied the third-party doctrine, under which a person who voluntarily revealed information to third partiessuch as telephone companies, banks, or technology companieslacks a reasonable expectation of privacy in that information and therefore forfeits Fourth Amendment protections. In Carpenter, the Court declined to apply the third-party doctrine to cell-site location information, even though the cell phone user revealed their location information to their phone company. Despite the significance of this ruling, the Court said that its decision in Carpenter was a narrow one that did not address other business records that might incidentally reveal location information or consider other collection techniques involving foreign affairs or national security.

Following Carpenter, many legal scholars and journalists predicted that the decision would result in significant litigation about whether the Fourth Amendment applied to new forms of non-content data held by third parties. In a dissent, Justice Alito wrote that the majority opinion in Carpenter guarantees a blizzard of litigation, and since then many defendants have relied on Carpenter to argue that police must use a warrant to obtain a variety of types of non-content data from third-parties.

In the two years following the Courts decision, however, Carpenter has had minimal impact on law enforcements ability to obtain non-content information from third parties without a warrant. For the most part, lower courts have largely heeded the Courts admonition that its decision was a narrow one, and declined to extend Fourth Amendment protection to a variety of non-content data types, including subscriber records, utility records, financial records, billing records, IP addresses, prescription drug information, cryptocurrency transactions, lists of devices accessing a wireless network, and cell-tower dumps in which cell phone service providers list every phone number connected to a particular cell tower during a specified time period. Earlier this month, moreover, the First Circuit held that Carpenter does not extend to eight months of video surveillance conducted from a pole camera. The court reasoned in part that unlike the collection of cell-site location information, pole camera surveillance is a conventional surveillance technique.

As the First Circuits recent decision highlights, lower courts have generally extended Carpenter only to data types that are closely analogous to the historical cell-site location information at issue in Carpenter, including data obtained with cell-site simulators, real-time (as opposed to historical) cell-site location information, historical cell-site location information spanning fewer than seven days, and GPS location data tied to a vehicle and acquired from a third party. In only a few key circumstances have lower courts relied on Carpenter to expand Fourth Amendment protections:

Continuous pole camera surveillance: In November 2019, for example, an appellate court in Colorado held that Carpenter merited extending Fourth Amendment protection to continuous pole camera surveillance of the curtilage of a defendants home.

Extensive computer monitoring: In August 2019, the Fourth Circuit held that extensive computer monitoring is sufficiently analogous to the privacy intrusion in Carpenter to merit Fourth Amendment protection. Relying on Carpenter, the Fourth Circuit held that the continuous monitoring of a defendants computer activity as a condition of supervised release involves a significant liberty intrusion by captur[ing] all computer activity regardless of any recidivism risk.

Lifetime or extensive monitoring of prior offenders: Also in August 2019, the North Carolina Supreme Court relied on Carpenter to invalidate mandatory lifetime GPS monitoring of sex offenders without an individualized assessment of the reasonableness of the search. Like cell-site location information, the court held, GPS monitoring permits a detailed chronicle of a persons physical presence compiled every day, every moment . . . [and] reveals more than we expect anyone to know. This February, a North Carolina appellate court relied on the North Carolina Supreme Courts decision to strike down a court order imposing thirty years of ankle monitoring on a sex offender as an unreasonable search.

Medical records containing information about alcohol or drug use: Last month, an Ohio appellate court held that the Fourth Amendment protects medical records containing information about alcohol or drug use following an accident suspected to be caused by driving under the influence. Relying on Carpenter, the court acknowledged conflicting decisions within the state on this issue.

In recent months, some lower courts have also suggested that they may be willing to extend Fourth Amendment protection to other sensitive data types in the future as data collection through technology becomes even more pervasive. Last month, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana declined to extend Carpenter to Facebook subscriber information, such as registration information and records of session times and duration. But the court noted: [t]he evolution of technology may one day change the analysis on this issue . . . . We may one day wake up and find that Facebook or some other social network has become as indispensable as the cell phone and determine, as a society, that the information collected is deserving of constitutional protection. This April, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held that Carpenter does not extend to data obtained from Advanced License Plate Readers (ALPR) placed at four fixed locations on public roads. In reaching its decision, however, the Massachusetts high court indicated that extensive use of ALPRs could constitute a search. If deployed widely enough, the court reasoned, ALPRs could tell police someones precise, real-time location virtually any time the person decided to drive, thus making ALPRs the vehicular equivalent of a cellular telephone ping.

In sum, Carpenters reach thus far has been largely limited. But lower courts have shown some willingness to extend Fourth Amendment protection to sensitive non-content data stored by third parties that reveals extensive, detailed, and intimate private information. We will continue to monitor how lower courts apply Carpenter to new data types and in new contexts as the case law further develops.

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Two Years of Carpenter - Lexology

Court of Appeals: No expectation of privacy in coin exchanges, blockchain – CoinGeek

The U.S. Court of Appeals has ruled that there is no Fourth Amendment expectation of privacy in either the user information stored on exchanges like Coinbase, or the information stored on the blockchain.

The developments come in a judgment given in the United States of America v Gratkowski. Richard Gratkowski is accused of purchasing child pornography online using BTC.

The FBI identified a cluster of BTC addresses used by the dark web site and then subpoenaed exchange platform Coinbase for a list of Coinbase customers whose accounts had sent BTC to addresses in that cluster. The information obtained by the subpoena was then used to obtain a search warrant for Gratkowskis house, where agents found a hard drive containing child pornography.

After his arrest and in the run-up to trial, Gratkowski argued that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in both his Coinbase transactions and the data stored on the blockchain. Therefore, the search was in violation of the Fourth Amendment prohibiting unreasonable search and seizures.

The Fourth Amendment and the third-party doctrine

Generally, the Fourth Amendment protection from unreasonable searches will be found to be violated if the person had a reasonable expectation of privacy regarding the items at issue.

This is qualified further by whats known as the third party doctrine, which was confirmed by the Supreme Court in United States v Miller and Smith v Maryland, and which holds that there will be no legitimate expectation of privacy in information voluntarily turned over to third parties.

The Miller case held that the doctrine applies to bank records. The Smith case concerned an individuals privacy in a pen registera device which records the telephone numbers dialed on a particular phone. The register was installed by the police. Because the numbers were being voluntarily provided to the phone company anyway, the majority of the Supreme Court found that there was no legitimate expectation of privacy.

Clearly, the world has moved on from landlines and is beginning to move away from traditional financial institutions, and so it has been long overdue to see the application of the Fourth Amendment and the third-party doctrine to a case involving more modern technology.

Carpenter v United States was heard by the Supreme Court in 2018, and there it was held that the third-party doctrine did not apply to cellphone location records on the basis of the information given: cellphone location records provide an all-encompassing and intimate window into a persons life, not only [an individuals] particular movements, but through them [their] familial, political, professional, religious and sexual associations.

It is on this point that they distinguished the facts from those of Miller and Smithsimply call logs do not reveal much in the way of identifying information. The fact that owning a cellphone is an indispensable part of daily life and that the location data did not require any positive act on the part of the user was also influential.

Coinbase, blockchain and Gratkowski

So how does this apply to information held on the blockchain?

The Court in the Gratkowski case felt that records held on the BTC blockchain was closer to the bank records in Miller and call logs in Smith than it was to the location data in Carpenter. As with the call logs, the information provided on the blockchain is limited to the amount transferred and the sender and recipientcertainly not the all encompassing nature of cellphone location records.

Further, transferring digital currency requires a positive act on the part of the usernot the ambient transmission of data as in Carpenter.

The Court found similarly on the Coinbase information. Like the banks in Miller, Coinbase is a financial institutionthe difference between Coinbase and the banks at issue in Miller is the currency being transacted, according to the Court. Theyre still dealing in the same information as a bank, falling far short of the all-encompassing information being transmitted in Carpenter, and like in Miller, the transmission of the information to Coinbase was done voluntarily and via a positive action.

The Court did briefly address the unique characteristics of trading on the blockchain, acknowledging that BTC users do have more avenues of privacy available to them than a traditional transaction done through an intermediary might be. Ultimately, however, the Court felt that the use of Coinbase was a voluntary sacrifice in privacy and as such did not give rise to a reasonable expectation of privacy.

Future

The nature of information transmitted to sites like Coinbase or shared on the blockchain isnt changing any time soon, so for now, Gratkowski is the authority on the applicability of the Fourth Amendment to those circumstances.

However, the reasoning in Carpenter may still yet be applicable to cases similar to Gratkowski. In Carpenter, the ubiquity of cellphone use meant that the information that is necessarily collected and transmitted through cellphone use cant be said to have been voluntarily handed over to a third party.

Its worth noting that blockchain is public, while identity information on exchanges is third party information. Bitcoin allows all the use cases of physical cash and beats systems such as debit cards hands down, but it is designed to allow privacy not anonymity; only cash uses retain privacy but even these will allow law enforcement to act on child porn cases. Bitcoinnow only BSV but of which BTC has some similarities still in its tracing abilitieswas never designedfor anonymous criminal activity.

Digital assets are certainly nowhere near as ubiquitous as cellphones, but on their current trajectory, they will reach that point eventually. Whether they will become ubiquitous enough for the Court to place the likes of Gratkowski in the same box as Carpenter remains to be seen.

New to Bitcoin? Check out CoinGeeksBitcoin for Beginnerssection, the ultimate resource guide to learn more about Bitcoinas originally envisioned by Satoshi Nakamotoand blockchain.

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Court of Appeals: No expectation of privacy in coin exchanges, blockchain - CoinGeek

Letter: Can the United States survive? – Northwest Herald

Does the United States have the moral fitness to survive? The history of the present government of the U.S. is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations all having the direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. To prove this, let a few of many facts be submitted to a candid world.

Congress has affected to render the military independent of and superior to the civil power, allowing the military industrial complex to engage in endless wars and charge the treasury with its debt.

Congress has cut off trade through sanctions that cripple targeted nations populations, using the pretext of Right to Protect to advance multinational business interests.

While bombing countries back to the stone age, then refusing to help rebuild, American officials heads explode when Iraq signs a letter of understanding with China where the Chinese will buy Iraqi oil and then help them rebuild their nation.

The Department of Injustice and factions among political parties have wasted millions of taxpayer dollars in failed attempts to repeal Obamacare and impeach President Trump.

The COVID-19 pandemic shows how the nations health care system established in the post-WWII years, specifically the Hill-Burton Act, which mandated the number of hospitals, beds and staff in each county in the U.S., has been looted by the for-profit managed care corporations, insurance giants, and Big Pharma.

As Edward Snowden exposed, the NSA was spying on everyone and keeping a permanent record negating citizens protection under the Fourth Amendment.

We as a nation have morphed into our oldest and most dogged enemy, the British Empire. We no longer have a National Bank but the cash cow for swindlers, the private Federal Reserve Central Bank.

We no longer protect our industries and manufacturers, but joined the British in Free Trade, looting both ourselves and whomever we trade with, and our dominance in science and technology is waning as we encourage enforced backwardness like favoring windmills which can never produce enough energy to replicate itself, while shutting down nuclear power plants.

Nicholas C. Kockler

Woodstock

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Letter: Can the United States survive? - Northwest Herald

Reverse Warrant Used In Robbery Investigation Being Challenged As Unconstitutional – Techdirt

from the gradually-narrowed-crafting dept

Reverse warrants are being challenged in a criminal case involving a bank robbery in Virginia. These warrants (also called "geofence warrants") work in reverse, hence the nickname. Rather than seeking to search property belonging to a known suspect, investigators approach Google with a demand for information on all cellphones in a certain location at a certain time and work backwards from this stash to determine who to pursue as a suspect.

Warrants require probable cause. And there doesn't seem to be much in the way of specific probable cause supporting these fishing expeditions. In this case, a bank was robbed in the late afternoon, resulting in plenty of people unrelated to the robbery being in the vicinity. This is all it takes to turn random people into suspects. And that has gone badly for investigators and, more importantly, innocent citizens on more than one occasion.

Accused bank robber Okello Chatrie is challenging the reverse warrant that led to his arrest and indictment on federal charges. Chatrie hopes that warrant will be found deficient because it will make it easier to undo the damage he seemingly inflicted on himself after he was taken into custody.

In Chatries case, bank cameras showed the robber came and went from an area where a church worker saw a suspicious person in a blue Buick. Chatries location history matched these movements. Prosecutors say Chatrie confessed after officers found a gun and nearly $100,000 in cash, including bills wrapped in bands signed by the bank teller.

Chatrie first moved to suppress this warrant late last year, arguing [PDF] that it's impossible for a warrant that targets no one in particular to contain the necessary probable cause for the search of Google's location records.

This is no ordinary warrant. It is a general warrant purporting to authorize a classic dragnet search of every Google user who happened to be near a bank in suburban Richmond during rush hour on a Monday evening. This is the kind of investigatory tactic that the Fourth Amendment was designed to guard against. Geofence warrants like the one in this case are incapable of satisfying the probable cause and particularity requirements, making them unconstitutional general warrants.

His motion also points out that the location info gathered by Google via the Android operating system is far more precise than cell site location info gathered by cell service providers.

[T]he location data available in Googles Sensorvault is even more precise than the data in Carpenter. Google can pinpoint an individuals location to approximately 20 meters compared to a few thousand meters for cell site location data...

In this case, investigators received "anonymized" data on nineteen cellphones that were in the area at the time of the robbery. From there, investigators determined Chatrie to be the most likely suspect. That's detailed in the warrant application [PDF] for a search of Chatrie's Google accounts.

Based upon Google's return of anonymized information, your Affiant discovered a Google account that: (1) was near the corner of Journey Christian Church prior to the robbery at approximately 4:30 to 4:40 p.m. -- the time period [redacted] recalled encountering a suspicious individual wearing reflective glasses in a blue Buick sedan; (2) was near the southwestern corner of Journey Christian Church prior to the robbery at approximately 4:48 p.m.; (3) was inside the Credit Union during the time of the robbery; and (4) immediately left the area following the robbery, leaving from the southwestern corner of Journey Christian Church.

Chatrie filed a supplemental suppression motion [PDF] in May of this year. This one expands on points previously made, as well as adding new information gathered from a few rounds of discovery. It opens with this statement, again characterizing reverse warrants as general warrants forbidden by the Fourth Amendment -- something that doesn't become acceptable just because investigators don't have any immediate leads.

Local police had no suspects in the robbery of the Call Federal Credit Union, so they decided to enlist Google to sleuth for them. Investigators went to a Virginia magistrate and, without conveying critical information, obtained a staggeringly broad and unparticularized warrant to go fishing in a pool of private location data that most people have never heard of. They demanded the location information associated with all Google users who happened to be in the vicinity of the bank during rush hour on a Monday evening, and thus, caused Google to search numerous tens of millions of accounts at their behest.

As the motion notes, the Supreme Court has said historical cell site data is protected by the Fourth Amendment, requiring the use of a warrant to obtain it. Even though there was a warrant involved here, it did not satisfy the particularity needed to justify this search of Fourth Amendment-protected records.

While the government obtained a warrant in this case, it did not obtain one for Mr. Chatries Location History data. In fact, it did not seek anyones data in particular. Rather, the government compelled Google to search everyones data in order to develop an investigative lead. This warrant was unconstitutional. It was both overbroad and lacking in particularly, a forbidden general warrant purporting to authorize a dragnet search of Google users. It did notand could not satisfy the Fourth Amendments probable cause and particularity requirements, rendering it wholly impermissible and void from the beginning.

The government's response [PDF] portrays Google as nothing more than a nearby resident who could be approached with the proper paperwork to compel it to disclose what it "saw."

The investigators were correct: Google had been a witness to the robbery. Pursuant to the warrant, Google produced to the United States a small set of records: location information over a two-hour interval of three identified and six unidentified individuals, and limited location information over a one-hour interval of ten other unidentified individuals. This information was sufficient for investigators to recognize that the defendants Google account likely belonged to the robber, and subsequent investigation led to his indictment.

The government says the Carpenter decision doesn't apply because -- unlike cell location data gathered by service providers -- users must opt in to allowing Google to collect their location data. The argument is an old one: that a person's agreement to share data with a company is an agreement to share data with a government.

Google could not obtain and store the defendants location without his undertaking multiple affirmative acts. He had to opt in to Location History in his account settings, and he had to enable Location Reporting for his phone. The defendant had discretion regarding whether Google stored his location information, and he retained the ability to delete it. And none of the services associated with Googles storage of location information are indispensable to participation in modern society. The defendant thus voluntarily disclosed his location information to Google, and Googles conveyance of that information to the United States did not infringe his reasonable expectation of privacy.

The government also argues that a warrant targeting nothing more than anonymized data is still somehow particular. It says warrant affidavits only need to show there's a probability that evidence will be found in the place searched.

In particular, the affidavit established: (1) that an unknown subject committed an armed bank robbery at a particular place and time; (2) that prior to the robbery, the robber held a cell phone to his ear and appeared to be speaking with someone; (3) that the majority of cell phones were smartphones; (4) that [n]early every Android phone has an associated Google account, and that Google collects and retains location data from such devices when the account owner enables Google location services; and (5) that Google can collect location information from non-Android smartphones if the devices are registered to a Google account and the user has location services enabled. From this information, there was a substantial basis for the magistrate to find probable cause to believe that Google possessed evidence related to the robbery.

The defendant argues that the warrant lacked probable cause because it did not identify any individuals or accounts to be searched because investigators did not know who they were searching for, or even if Google would have relevant data. However, a warrant for evidence of crime need not identify specific individuals or establish with certainty that evidence will be foundall it must do is establish a fair probability that specified evidence will be found in the place to be searched.

The judge has yet to rule on this suppression attempt. The government's arguments seek to turn a broad warrant into something that "narrowly" targets what may be a very large data subset collected and stored by Google. The implications of claiming everyone who uses Google's location services voluntarily waives their privacy right in this information are far-ranging and somewhat opposed to the Supreme Court's Carpenter decision. While the Supreme Court only delivered a narrow ruling on the warrantless acquisition of several days of cell site location info, it pointedly did not state this was the only way this decision should be applied. Other courts have already found Carpenter's reasoning capable of covering third-party records not explicitly discussed in that decision.

Finally, also of interest in the reporting on this case is that reverse warrants are the target of legislation in New York. And we have, of all people, the Proud Boys, to thank for it.

If you are someone who went out on the streets to express your rage, your sadness and your hope that there is a better way to do policing and are then subject to a warrant, I think that would go against everything we are telling people they have the right to do, said New York state Sen. Zellnor Myrie, a lead sponsor of a bill to ban geofence warrants.

The legislation was prompted in part by a New York Times report that prosecutors sought Googles cellphone records around the spot where the Proud Boys, a far-right group, brawled with anti-fascist protesters in 2018. Several Proud Boys were later convicted of assault.

If this challenge ends up in a federal appeals court, more attention will be drawn to these questionable warrants that allow investigators to treat everyone in an area as a suspect by leveraging data many cellphone users may not realize is being collected and stored. And, because this is a relatively new investigative option, judges aren't being provided with all the details needed to make informed decisions, which is going to result in even more collateral damage in the future if courts don't start doing something about this now.

Filed Under: 4th amendment, okello chatrie, privacy, reverse warrant

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Reverse Warrant Used In Robbery Investigation Being Challenged As Unconstitutional - Techdirt

DOJ report says Springfield narcotics officers have a pattern of using excessive force – The Boston Globe

Springfield police narcotics officers have a pattern of using excessive force that includes needlessly escalating encounters with civilians and then punching members of the public in the face, according to a report from federal investigators released Wednesday night.

The report, the result of a two-year investigation by the US Justice Department and the US attorneys office for Massachusetts, says there is reasonable cause to believe that Narcotics Bureau officers engage in a pattern or practice of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution.

Officers are too quick to throw punches and sometimes resort to unreasonable takedown maneuvers that, like head strikes, could reasonably be expected to cause head injuries, according to the report, which attributes the pattern to systemic deficiencies in policies, accountability systems, and training.

The department doesnt require officers to report hands on uses of force, as most police departments do, which allows officers to avoid reporting physical interactions with civilians or to submit imprecise, misleading reports. Some narcotics officers also falsified reports, and supervisors failed to effectively review the incidents that were reported, according to investigators.

Representatives for the Police Department and the Springfield Police Patrolmens Association did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday night.

In a statement, Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said he had just received the report and he will be reviewing this document tomorrow with Police Commissioner Cheryl Clapprood and City Solicitor Attorney Ed Pikula and we will be conducting a press briefing ASAP.

Andrew E. Lelling, the US attorney for Massachusetts, said in a separate statement that the investigation revealed chronic issues with the use of force, poor record keeping on that subject, and repeated failures to impose discipline for officer misconduct.

Lelling added that police and city officials had cooperated with the investigation and were committed to genuine reform.

The report says the departments system for preventing officers from using unlawful force and investigating such incidents is broken.

It calls for better reporting of encounters where officers use force, new training on the use of force, improvements to the internal investigation system, and greater accountability in the discipline system for officers.

Investigators reviewed video recordings and more than 100,000 pages of written documents, and the interviewed Springfield officers, supervisors, and command staff, as well as city officials, community members, and activists to compile the report, officials said.

US Attorney General William Barr said in a statement that police officers have the toughest job in America but also a tremendous responsibility to uphold the public trust.

Barr pledge that the Justice Department would work with Springfield officials to ensure that the police officers and people of Springfield get the law enforcement agency they deserve, one that effectively and constitutionally stops violent crime and narcotics trafficking.

Laura Crimaldi of the Globe staff contributed to this report.

Jeremy C. Fox can be reached at jeremy.fox@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @jeremycfox.

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DOJ report says Springfield narcotics officers have a pattern of using excessive force - The Boston Globe

Police Buy Hacked Data, to Fish for EvidenceIs That Even Legal? – Security Boulevard

A firm called SpyCloud is selling your data to law enforcement.Whats worse is that the sources of that data are hackers.

Thats right: A company is selling data it says is stolen to the police so they can decide if youre guilty of something. There are no words.

Of course, theres the small matter of federal law: 18 U.S.C. 2315Receipt of Stolen Propertyapplies if a person willfully receives valuable stolen property thats been moved across state lines.

Is law enforcement above the law? And if not, who enforces the law in that case?In todays SBBlogwatch, stop the worldwe want to get off.

Your humble blogwatchercurated these bloggy bits for your entertainment. Not to mention:the black hole in your yard.

Whats the craic?Joseph Cox reportsPolice Are Buying Access to Hacked Website Data:

Breached data now has another customer: law enforcement. Companies are selling government agencies access to data stolen from websites in the hope that it can generate investigative leads.[In] webinar slides by a company called SpyCloud, presented to prospective customersthe company claimed to empower investigators from law enforcement agencies and enterprises. The slides were shared by a source who was concerned about law enforcement agencies buying access to hacked data.[It] raises questions about whether law enforcement agencies should be leveraging information originally stolen by hackers. [They] would also be obtaining access to hacked data on people who are not associated with any crimesand would not need to follow the usual mechanisms.SpyCloud confirmed the slides were authentic. Were turning the criminals data against them, or at least were empowering law enforcement to do that, Dave Endler, co-founderof SpyCloud, [said]. The data that were providing to law enforcement, tends to be data thats already in the hands of criminals, and in our mindset it tends to be already public.That may be the case for some particularly widely traded breaches, but others are not as simple to obtain. Data trading forums often ask users to pay for datasets.

Should I be worried?Shoshana Wodinsky addsLaw Enforcement Is Buying Its Way Into Our Breaches:

Right now, theres a good chance your digital life is multitudes bigger than it was just a few months ago. Theres also a good chance that you (again, like everyone I kn0w), are rightfully concerned about the digital paper trail youre now leaving behind, either for data-hungry brokers or for national authorities.Because Spycloud is a private company, these agencies can fudge the Fourth Amendment to get their hands on that data wherever they want, whenever they want, no warrant required. Look, I dont doubt that [this] pretty unassuming companyhas its heart in the right place herebut theres still something about this service that makes meuncomfortable.Maybe its becausethe Spycloud website boasts about how they couldbe handing these cops highly enriched PII like first and last names, addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, SSNs, and 150 other types of data. Maybe its because Ive seen firsthand how easy it is for these sorts of data breaches to ruin someones life.Agencies like the DOJa confirmed Spycloud customercan get this data behind our backs. While warrantless collection of this sort of data is typically a major slap in the face to the Fourth Amendment, federal authorities in our country have a storied history of bypassing those pesky legal requirements.

How is that even legal?Tyler Sonnemaker shines more light from above: [Youre firedEd.]

Law enforcement agencies have been buying up data originally obtained by hackers, including peoples emails, usernames, passwords, internet addresses, and phone numbers, from a cybersecurity company called SpyCloud, allowing them to bypass normal legal processes. While SpyCloud presents its tools as a way to help law enforcement investigators (and companies) catch cybercriminals, it also raises concerns about enabling them to collect information on innocent people.Investigators often need permission from a court to obtain certain types of digital information, but buying breach data from a private company gives them a more efficient and less accountable way to scoop up data. More than 15 billion records were exposed in nearly 8,000 breaches in 2019, according to Risk Based Security, giving law enforcement a treasure trove of personal data.While companies argue their products play a vital role in helping the government track down criminals and terrorists, theyve also sparked backlash from civil rights and privacy advocates and increasingly, from employees.

Wait, so is it legal?Ilia Kolochenko thinks not:

As a matter of practice, some law enforcement organisations and police units indeed occasionally buy stolen data from various sources. The data may then be used for a wide spectrum of monitoring, preventive or investigative purposes.Its usage, however, rarely becomes official and mostly serves different in-house purposes. The use of stolen, or otherwise unlawfully obtained data or evidence, is expressly prohibited by law.Moreover, subpoenaed data will likely be more recent, relevant, and complete, and wont pose problems for law enforcement officers later if a defendantcan afford skilled criminal defense lawyers.

So its illegal, right?Luthair agrees, but thinks around the problem:

One wonders the general legality in accessing this data for other purposes, and its admissibility in court or are they simply creating [a] parallel constructionabout how they might have otherwise arrived at some knowledge?

But wont somebody think of the children?Heres the National Child Protection Task Force CEO Kevin Metcalf:

Breach data is used by criminals every day. Together SpyCloud and NCPTF are using that data against them. Were proud to partner with SpyCloud to aid child trafficking investigators in solving important, time-sensitive cases.

In summary?ShanghaiBill cuts to the chase:

[The police] paid for it, supplying profit to the criminals and incentivizing future crime. They obtained, through criminal means, information that they would have never been allowed to collect with a legal warrant.They should be fired. Their supervisors should be fired. The politicians that allowed this to happen should be named andvoted out of office.

AndKevin Beaumont@GossiTheDogdoesnt sound positive:

Between cops routinely paying their own ransomware and now buying hacked data, we really are empowering police in the US to pay criminals, to keep their jobs.Seriously though, guardrails need putting up internationally around use of stolen data including security companies and authorities. Its a wild west, and Im not sure its healthy.

Meanwhile,its sauce for the goose, thinks knaapie:

Interesting. If usage of information from hacks by law enforcement is legitimate, then the usage of information from hacks by, for instance, Wikileaks would be legitimate too.

The mystery of black hole entropy

Previously in And Finally

You have been readingSBBlogwatchbyRichiJennings. Richi curates the best bloggy bits, finest forums, and weirdest websites so you dont have to. Hate mail may be directed to@RiCHiorsbbw@richi.uk. Ask your doctor before reading. Your mileage may vary. E&OE. 30.

Image sauce: Anja/cocoparisienne (via Pixabay)

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Police Buy Hacked Data, to Fish for EvidenceIs That Even Legal? - Security Boulevard

Police Immunity Laws Test Conservative Principle And Rule Of Law – The National Memo

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin faces murder and manslaughter charges for kneeling on George Floyd's neck until he stopped breathing. But even if Chauvin is convicted, Floyd's family may not be able to pursue claims under a federal statute that authorizes lawsuits against government officials who violate people's constitutional rights.

The uncertain prospects for the lawsuit Floyd's relatives plan to file underlines the unjust and irrational consequences of qualified immunity, a doctrine that shields police from liability for outrageous conduct when the rights they violated were not "clearly established" at the time. Congress should seize the opportunity created by Floyd's May 25 death and the nationwide protests it provoked to abolish that doctrine, which the Supreme Court unlawfully grafted onto the Civil Rights Act of 1871.

Was it "clearly established" on May 25 that kneeling on a prone, handcuffed arrestee's neck for nearly nine minutes violated his Fourth Amendment rights? The issue is surprisingly unsettled in the Eighth Circuit, which includes Minnesota.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit blocked civil rights claims in two recent cases with broadly similar facts: handcuffed detainees who died after being restrained face down by several officers. Unlike those detainees, Floyd was not actively resisting at the time of his death, except to repeatedly complain that he could not breathe.

While that distinction could make a difference in the constitutional analysis, we can't be sure. Even if the Eighth Circuit concluded that Chauvin's actions were unconstitutional, it could still decide the law on that point was not clear enough at the time of Floyd's arrest, meaning Chauvin would receive qualified immunity.

The Eighth Circuit could even reach the latter conclusion without resolving the constitutional question, as courts have commonly done since 2009, when the Supreme Court began allowing that shortcut. To defeat qualified immunity in this case, says UCLA law professor Joanna Schwartz, a leading critic of the doctrine, Floyd's family "would have to find cases in which earlier defendants were found to have violated the law in precisely the same way."

This term the Court had 13 opportunities to revisit qualified immunity, but it has not accepted any of those petitions and so far has rejected all but one. Those rejected cases included one that posed this question: "Does binding authority holding that a police officer violates the Fourth Amendment when he uses a police dog to apprehend a suspect who has surrendered by lying down on the ground 'clearly establish' that it is likewise unconstitutional to use a police dog on a suspect who has surrendered by sitting on the ground with his hands up?"

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit thought not. Dissenting from his colleagues' refusal to review that decision, Justice Clarence Thomas reiterated his doubts about qualified immunity, saying, "There likely is no basis for the objective inquiry into clearly established law that our modern cases prescribe."

Given the Supreme Court's lack of interest in reconsidering qualified immunity, Congress has a responsibility to reassert its legislative powers by revoking this license for police abuse. Last week, Schwartz and more than 300 other law professors urged Congress to do so, noting that the doctrine gives cops not only "one free pass" but also a "continuing free pass" by allowing courts to block claims without ruling on their merits, thus ensuring "that no law becomes clearly established."

The Ending Qualified Immunity Act, which Rep. Justin Amash (I-MI), introduced last month, so far has 64 cosponsors, all but one are Democrats. The situation is similar in the Senate, where Mike Braun (R-IN), recently unveiled the Reforming Qualified Immunity Act, which would narrow the doctrine and make municipalities liable for police misconduct.

This issue is a test for conservatives who defend the rule of law and the separation of powers. Both of those principles are undermined by a judicially invented loophole that allows government officials to escape accountability when they abuse their powers.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @JacobSullum. To find out more about Jacob Sullum and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at http://www.creators.com.

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Police Immunity Laws Test Conservative Principle And Rule Of Law - The National Memo

For Portland Police, Indiscriminate Use of Tear Gas During Protests Is Unavoidable – The Portland Mercury

Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

According to the Portland Police Bureau (PPB), this is the safest way to stop criminal acts being committed by a few individuals in the crowd.

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PPB Deputy Chief Chris Davis explained officers reliance on tear gas, also known as CS gas, at a Wednesday press conference where he detailed PPBs response to violence taking place during that past 40 days of protests.

"We don't want to use CS gas at all. I don't like it," said Davis. But, he explained, if members of a crowd are lighting fires near government buildings or throwing objects that put others' lives at riskand peaceful protesters refuse to leave the areaofficers don't see another option.

"It's a matter of us cooperating with each other," said Davis. "It's to be able to have people go out and express first amendment rights without coming to the point of risk of... an officer or a community member getting seriously injured, or killed. If it's the choice between using CS gas and a fatality....Well, I'd prefer that we weren't put in the position to make that choice."

But is it a necessary choice?

Davis' explanation echoes the legal arguments used by attorneys representing the City of Portland in a case that centers on this kind of indiscriminate harm inflicted on protesters. The federal lawsuit, filed by nonprofit Don't Shoot PDX, accuses PPB of violating the constitutional rights of non-violent protesters by punishing them for the actions of a few people.

"Consistently... the City of Portland has used the acts of individualsfew of whom are arrestedto mete out mass punishment against all present," reads a recent legal filing by lawyers representing Dont Shoot PDX. Persons attempting to leave the scene were punished. Persons shielding themselves from the unlawful use of force were punished. Persons being mere bystanders were punished.

Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

PPB has policies limiting officers from using aerosol restraints (ie: handheld pepper spray) and impact munitions (ie: rubber bullets, flash bang grenades, and pepper balls) indiscriminately into a crowd. Those restrictions don't apply to tear gas. Instead, PPB directives grant officers the right to use tear gas on entire crowds if a "civil disturbance" has been declared. A new state law goes further to limit tear gas unless a "riot" is declared.

Yet lawyers representing Don't Shoot PDX say these rules still violate peaceful protesters' Fourth Amendment protections against "unreasonable seizure" by law enforcement without probable cause for arrest.

"Theres no constitutional authority to use force on a crowd unless you have the adequate level of probable cause for every last person who could be affected," said Juan Chavez, one of Don't Shoot PDXs attorneys.

The nonprofits legal team is also arguing that this indiscriminate use of gas silences peaceful protesters and deters them from attending these protests, effectively restricting their First Amendment right to free speech.

PPB officers working these protests seem to justify their use of tear gas by pinning individual crimes onto entire groups of people. The citys court filings in response to the lawsuit include dozens of statements by police whove worked on the ground during recent protests. In these statements, police describe "a crowd throwing projectiles" or "a crowd [that had] stolen construction barriers" or a "violent crowd," as if all people in the crowd were working together to commit a crime.

In one instance, Officer Heather Martley describes seeing a group of at least 100 individuals that "began picking up items and throwing them in our direction" before she threw a tear gas (or CS gas) canister at them. Theres no evidence indicating that all 100 protesters threw objects at Martley. Several officers explained that tear gas is such an effective tool to use against large, dense groups of protesters specifically for its ability to affect everyone in that crowd.

Lawyers representing Don't Shoot PDX say that officers should be arresting individual people committing crimes at these protests instead of subjecting all attendees to painful chemicals.

Davis says it's not that easy.

"Wed like to do that, but its extremely challenging because of the tactics that are used [by protesters]," Davis told reporters Wednesday, pointing to instances where protesters hid behind signs or other non-violent protesters to avoid being identified by police.

"It really is difficult to [arrest individual people] without significant use of force and significant injury to everyone involved," Davis added.

Chris Davis, right, discusses police tear gas tactics during a virtual press conference.

Where it gets challenging is when people choose to stay anyway, Davis said. By that point, we have the authority to disperse the crowd [with tear gas] based on what were seeing.

Dont Shoot PDX attorney Jesse Merrithew says people who refuse PPB dispersal orders still shouldnt be subject to violence.

This concept is not difficult to understand, Merrithew said on a media call last Wednesday. [People] have the right to engage in civil disobedienceto refuse to obey a law that they dont believe is justand if theyre not fighting with the police, if they're not threatening anybody or hurting anybody, you cannot use force against them. The worst thing you can do to them is arrest them. The Portland Police Bureau does not respect this basic principal.

In early June, US Federal Judge Marco Hernandez approved a temporary restraining order requested by Dont Shoot PDX, which prohibits the police use of tear gas and other munitions unless "the lives or safety of the public or the police are at risk." While Dont Shoot PDX wants tear gas during protests banned outright, it has accepted this added limitation on riot control weapons while the case is being debated in court.

But Hernandez temporary order expires on July 24. On July 16, Dont Shoot PDXs legal team will argue in favor of a preliminary injunctiona tool that would extend this ban for the duration of the case. The City of Portland is prepared to push back.

Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

If Hernandez rejects the injunction, theres another barrier that may limit officers use of tear gas. On June 6, Mayor Ted Wheeler instructed PPB to not use tear gas "unless there is a serious and immediate threat to life safety." But, while Wheelers order is similar to Hernandez, it doesnt carry the same consequences if breached. If police violate a federal court order, the City of Portland could be held in contempt of court. If police violate Wheelers orders, its not clear how hed be able to hold them accountable.

Regardless, as long as police can argue that someones life is at risk. theres no immediate tool that will keep PPB from using tear gas on large groups of people. Theres not even a guarantee that PPB will acknowledge the nightly demonstrations as what attendees believe them to beprotests. Davis made this clear at the beginning of Wednesdays press conference.

Theres a very big difference between protests and the kind of mayhem were seen here every night, said Davis, who refused to call the hundreds who attend the citys nightly demonstrations protesters. This is not a protest.

_____

Editor's Note: The Don't Shoot PDX case isn't the only legal challenge to PPB over its response to recent protests. The ACLU of Oregon has filed a class action lawsuit against PPB officers for limiting journalists and legal observers from documenting police during protests. The Portland Mercury is one of several plaintiffs in this case.

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For Portland Police, Indiscriminate Use of Tear Gas During Protests Is Unavoidable - The Portland Mercury

Investigation into Springfield Police Departments Narcotics Unit finds pattern of excessive force – WWLP.com

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) A years-long investigation into the Narcotics Bureauof the Springfield Police Department by the U.S. Department of Justice has revealed a pattern or practice of using excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The Office of U.S. Attorney AndrewLellingannounced that the investigation found the Narcotics Bureaus pattern or practice of excessive force is directly attributable to systemic deficiencies in policies, which fail to require detailed and consistent use-of-force reporting, and accountability systems that do not provide meaningful reviews of uses of force.

As demonstrated by recent events, it is crucial that our urban police departments keep the trust of their communities and ensure accountability for officer misconduct. Our investigation of the Springfield Police Department over the last year revealed chronic issues with the use of force, poor record keeping on that subject, and repeated failures to impose discipline for officer misconduct. That said, the Police Department and the City of Springfield have fully cooperated with this investigation and have made clear their commitment to genuine reform. We look forward to working with them to make Springfield a safer place.

The investigation was conducted pursuant to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 and was announced on April 13, 2018.Its findings, a 28-page report, comes as a petition demanding the removal of the current police commissioner, Cheryl Clapprood, has been created with over 600 signatures.

Clapprood, a 40 year veteran of the department, was appointed police commissioner in September 2019, after serving as acting commissioner for six months following the sudden retirement of then-Commissioner John Barbieri. Barbieri was with the department for 31-years.

At a news conference announcing his retirement, Mayor Domenic Sarno told 22News it was a mutually accepted decision. The mayor then named Clapprood, who was deputy police chief at the time, to acting commissioner. She was officially sworn in on October 8, 2019.

The DOJ said investigators conducted an in-depth review of the police departments documents, including over 100,000 pages of written policies and procedures, training materials, and internal reports, data, video footage, and investigative files.

DOJattorneys and investigators also conducted interviews withSpringfield Policeofficers, supervisors and command staff, andcity officials, and met with community members and local advocates.

Ive said many times that being a police officer is the toughest job in America. We owe these public servants our respect and our support. But with this high calling comes a tremendous responsibility to uphold the public trust. The Department of Justice is committed to supporting our law enforcement while holding departments accountable that violate this sacred trust. The Department will work with the City of Springfield and the Police Department to ensure that the police officers and people of Springfield get the law enforcement agency they deserve, one that effectively and constitutionally stops violent crime and narcotics trafficking.

The Justice Department said Springfield Policecooperated with theirinvestigationand has already begun to implement a number of remedial measures.

Springfield Police spokesperson Ryan Walsh confirmed to 22News that Springfield Police received the DOJ report Wednesday evening as well. He said they are reviewing the findings before making a formal statement.

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Investigation into Springfield Police Departments Narcotics Unit finds pattern of excessive force - WWLP.com