FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 18, 2013
MEDIA CONTACT
Maurice A . Thompson
(614) 340-9817
Stalled in Committee
after 1851 Testimony, Bill would permit sharing of
"any information" to law enforcement, if not amended
"any information" to law enforcement, if not amended
Columbus,
OH - The 1851 Center for Constitutional Law today took action that stalled
passage of Senate Bill 5, legislation that, if enacted, would permit
warrantless acquisition, by state and local law enforcement, of Ohioans'
travels and cell phone communications.
The
fast-tracked Bill, which passed 32-1 in the Ohio Senate and was poised to be
voted out of its House committee today, voted on by the entire House on June
19, and enacted into law within a matter of days, received almost no public or
media scrutiny until the 1851 Center's involvement today.
In
his testimony before the House Committee on Transportation Public Safety and
Homeland Security, 1851 Center Director Maurice Thompson explained the
following:
·
The Bill authorizes wireless service providers to break their
voluntarily-agreed-to contracts with Ohio customers, to whom they've promised
privacy, and strips Ohioans of their right to enforce these contracts, or sue
for damages (Cell phone carriers are granted absolute immunity for sharing
information with law enforcement).
·
The Bill is broader than the controversial federal NSA program,
in that it authorizes searches not related to foreign communications or
terrorism, including activity related to petty crime such as driving
infractions, or no crime at all.
·
While the Bill's initial requirements of an
"emergency" are well-defined, later division of the Bill place no
limits on local law enforcement's authority to acquire cell phone records of
any Ohioan for any reason.
·
Cell phone companies have considerable incentive to share this
information with Ohio police, to whom they can sell this information without
liability (under the Bill) at up to $2,200 per search.
"We
were shocked to learn that this Bill had overwhelmingly passed the Senate with
such speed, and that there was previously no opposition," said Maurice
Thompson, Executive Director of the 1851 Center. "Ohioans should be free
from warrantless searches of their phone records except in the gravest of
emergencies, if at all, and they should be free to contract with carriers that
will not sell their information. This Bill would violate those constitutional
principles, accomplishing the very thing the Fourth Amendment was written to
guard against. That is why we have taken this action."
After
an hour of testimony by Thompson today, which sometimes included tense
exchanges with state representatives, the House Committee agreed to table the
Bill and field the 1851 Center's proposed amendment - - which require a search
warrants before any non-emergency acquisition of cell phone information may
occur - - before taking further action on the Bill. The next Committee meeting
on the matter is not yet scheduled.
Upon review of 1851 testimony, several Senators who voted for the Bill have indicated that the Bill was misleading, and that their support, at the behest of Senate leadership, was too hasty.
Read The 1851 Center's testimony on proposed Senate Bill 5 HERE.
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