Apple
lawyer, FBI director to face off before Congress
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[March 01, 2016]
By Julia Harte and Julia Edwards
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Apple Inc <AAPL.O>
and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation will make their cases
before a congressional panel on Tuesday regarding a court order to force
the technology company to give the FBI data from the iPhone belonging to
one of the San Bernardino shooters.
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On Thursday, Apple filed a motion to vacate the court order,
maintaining its stance that Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook said he
would be willing to take all the way to the Supreme Court. Apple's
general counsel, Bruce Sewell, will argue Tuesday that creating a
tool to unlock the phone would weaken the security of hundreds of
millions of Apple devices, according to Sewell's prepared remarks
before the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee.
"Hackers and cyber criminals could use this to wreak havoc on our
privacy and personal safety," he said in those remarks.
Sewell will testify directly after FBI Director James Comey, who
told lawmakers last week that creating an unlocking technique would
"unlikely to be a trailblazer" for setting a legal precedent and
would not be useful for breaking into later generation Apple
devices.
Comey told a congressional panel on Thursday that the phone could
have "locator services" that would help the agency fill in a gap in
its knowledge of the route that Syed Rizwan Farook and Malik
Tashfeen traveled as they fled police after their shooting rampage
in December that killed 14 and wounded 22 in San Bernardino,
California.
"We've looked at every gas station camera, every intersection
camera, we have the whole route, but we're missing 19 minutes before
they were finally killed by law enforcement," Comey said. "The
answer to that might be on the device."
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance will also testify in support
of the FBI, arguing that default device encryption "severely harms"
criminal prosecutions at the state level, including in cases in his
district involving at least 175 iPhones.
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Vance's office has drafted legislation it wants Congress to enact
that would go beyond the single court case and require companies
like Apple to ensure that their devices could be accessed in
unencrypted form.
"My colleagues from jurisdictions around the country have been
running into the same road blocks in their efforts to investigate
and prosecute serious crimes," Vance said in prepared remarks.
The U.S. Justice Department has sought court orders to force Apple
to extract data from 15 devices in the past four months, beginning
with a case in Brooklyn in which Apple declined to cooperate with
investigators in October.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards and Julia Harte; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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