Push for encryption law falters despite
Apple case spotlight
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[May 27, 2016]
By Dustin Volz, Mark Hosenball and Joseph Menn
WASHINGTON/ SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
After a rampage that left 14 people dead in San Bernardino, key U.S.
lawmakers pledged to seek a law requiring technology companies to give
law enforcement agencies a "back door" to encrypted communications and
electronic devices, such as the iPhone used by one of the shooters.
Now, only months later, much of the support is gone, and the push
for legislation dead, according to sources in congressional offices,
the administration and the tech sector.
Draft legislation that Senators Richard Burr and Dianne Feinstein,
the Republican and Democratic leaders of the Intelligence Committee,
had circulated weeks ago likely will not be introduced this year
and, even if it were, would stand no chance of advancing, the
sources said.
Key among the problems was the lack of White House support for
legislation in spite of a high-profile court showdown between the
Justice Department and Apple Inc over the suspect iPhone, according
to Congressional and Obama Administration officials and outside
observers.
"They've dropped anchor and taken down the sail," former NSA and CIA
director Michael Hayden said.
For years, the Justice Department lobbied unsuccessfully for a way
to unmask suspects who "go dark," or evade detection through coded
communications in locked devices.
When the Federal Bureau of Investigation took Apple to court in
February to try to open the iPhone in its investigation of the San
Bernardino slayings, the cause gained traction in Washington. The
political landscape had shifted - or so it seemed.
The short life of the push for legislation illustrates the
intractable nature of the debate over digital surveillance and
encryption, which has been raging in one form or another since the
1990s.
Tech companies, backed by civil liberties groups, insist that
building law enforcement access into phones and other devices would
undermine security for everyone-including the U.S. government
itself.
Law enforcement agencies maintain they need a way to monitor phone
calls, emails and text messages, along with access to encrypted
data. Polls show the public is split on whether the government
should have access to all digital data.
The legal battle between the FBI and Apple briefly united many
around the idea that Congress - not the courts - should decide the
issue. But the consensus was fleeting.
Feinstein's Democratic colleagues on the Intelligence Committee -
along with some key Republicans - backed away. The House never got
on board.
The CIA and NSA were ambivalent, according to several current and
former intelligence officials, in part because officials in the
agencies feared any new law would interfere with their own
encryption efforts.
Even supporters worried that if a bill were introduced but failed,
it would give Apple and other tech companies another weapon to use
in future court battles.
Burr had said repeatedly that legislation was imminent.
But last week, he and Feinstein told Reuters there was no timeline
for the bill. Feinstein said she planned to talk to more tech
stakeholders, and Burr said, “be patient.”
In the meantime, tech companies have accelerated encryption efforts
in the wake of the Apple case. The court showdown ended with a
whimper when the FBI said it had found a way to get into the phone,
and subsequently conceded privately it had found nothing of value.
[to top of second column] |
A worker checks an iPhone in a repair store in New York, February
17, 2016. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
THE FBI GOES TO BATTLE
A week after the San Bernardino attack, Burr told Reuters passing
encryption legislation was urgent because "if we don't, we will be
reading about terrorist attacks on a more frequent basis."
FBI Director James Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee soon
after that encryption was “overwhelmingly affecting" the
investigation of murders, drug trafficking and child pornography.
A week later, the Justice Department persuaded a judge to issue a
sweeping order demanding Apple write software to open an iPhone used
by San Bernardino suspect Sayeed Farook, who died in a shootout with
law enforcement.
Apple fought back, arguing, among other things, that only
Congressional legislation could authorize what the court was
demanding. Many saw the Justice Department's move as a way to bring
pressure on Congress to act.
President Obama appeared to tacitly support Comey's court fight and
the idea that there should be limits on criminal suspects' ability
to hide behind encryption. But even as the drive for legislation
seemed to be gaining momentum, consensus was dissipating.
Senator Lindsey Graham, an influential Republican, withdrew support
in a sudden about-face.
“I was all with you until I actually started getting briefed by the
people in the intel community,” Graham told Attorney General Loretta
Lynch during a hearing in March. “I’m a person that’s been moved by
the arguments of the precedent we set and the damage we may be doing
to our own national security.”
On the Democratic side, Senator Ron Wyden vowed to filibuster what
he called a "dangerous proposal," that "would leave Americans more
vulnerable to stalkers, identity thieves, foreign hackers and
criminals."
Senator Mark Warner advanced a competing bill to form a commission
to study the issue.
A half dozen people familiar with the White House deliberations said
they were hamstrung by a long-standing split within the Obama
Administration, pitting Comey and the DOJ against technology
advisors and other agencies including the Commerce and State
Departments.[L2N16C1UC]
They also said there was reluctance to take on the tech industry in
an election year.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz and Mark Hosenball in Washington and
Joseph Menn in San Francisco; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Lisa
Girion)
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