FBI
director says investigators unable to unlock San Bernardino shooter's
phone content
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[February 10, 2016]
By Dustin Volz and Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - FBI Director James
Comey said on Tuesday that federal investigators have still been unable
to access the contents of a cellphone belonging to one of the killers in
the Dec. 2 shootings in San Bernardino, California, due to encryption
technology.
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Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that the phenomenon
of communications "going dark" due to more sophisticated technology
and wider use of encryption is "overwhelmingly affecting" law
enforcement operations, including investigations into murder, car
accidents, drug trafficking and the proliferation of child
pornography.
"We still have one of those killer's phones that we have not been
able to open," Comey said in reference to the San Bernardino attack.
Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, launched the Islamic State-inspired attack
with his wife, Tashfeen Malik, 29, at a social services agency in
the California city, leaving 14 dead.
Comey and other federal officials have long warned that powerful
encryption poses a challenge for criminal and national security
investigators, though the FBI director added Tuesday that
"overwhelmingly this is a problem that local law enforcement sees."
Technology experts and privacy advocates counter that so-called
"back door" access provided to authorities would expose data to
malicious actors and undermine the overall security of the Internet.
A study from the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard
released last month citing some current and former intelligence
officials concluded that fears about encryption are overstated in
part because new technologies have given investigators unprecedented
means to track suspects.
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Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, asked Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper to provide a declassified response to the
Berkman study within 60 days. Clapper agreed to the request.
The White House last year abandoned a push for legislation that
would mandate U.S. technology firms to allow investigators a way to
overcome encryption protections, amid rigorous private sector
opposition. But the issue has found renewed life after the shootings
in San Bernardino and Paris.
Senators Richard Burr and Dianne Feinstein, the Republican and
Democratic leaders of the intelligence panel, have said they would
like to pursue encryption legislation, though neither has introduced
a bill yet.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz and Mark Hosenball; editing by Sandra
Maler and G Crosse)
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