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- *** EFFector Online #1.04 (May 1, 1991) ***
- *** (Formerly EFF News) ***
- *** The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc. ***
- *** Net address: eff@eff.org ***
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- ************************************************************
-
-
- Editors: Gerard Van der Leun (gerard@eff.org)
- Mike Godwin (mnemonic@eff.org)
-
- REPRINT PERMISSION GRANTED: Material in EFFector Online may be reprinted if
- you cite the source. Where an individual author has asserted copyright in
- an article, please contact her directly for permission to reproduce.
-
- E-mail subscription requests: eff-request@eff.org
- Editorial submissions: eff@eff.org
-
-
-
- AND NOW THE NEWS
-
-
- The following press release was Faxcast to over 1,500 media
- organizations and interested parties this afternoon:
-
-
- EXTENDING THE CONSTITUTION TO AMERICAN CYBERSPACE:
-
-
- TO ESTABLISH CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTION FOR ELECTRONIC MEDIA AND TO
- OBTAIN REDRESS FOR AN UNLAWFUL SEARCH, SEIZURE, AND PRIOR RESTRAINT
- ON PUBLICATION, STEVE JACKSON GAMES AND THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER
- FOUNDATION TODAY FILED A CIVIL SUIT AGAINST THE UNITED STATES SECRET
- SERVICE AND OTHERS.
-
-
- On March 1, 1990, the United States Secret Service nearly
- destroyed Steve Jackson Games (SJG), an award-winning publishing
- business in Austin, Texas.
- In an early morning raid with an unlawful and
- unconstitutional warrant, agents of the Secret Service conducted a
- search of the SJG office. When they left they took a manuscript
- being prepared for publication, private electronic mail, and several
- computers, including the hardware and software of the SJG Computer
- Bulletin Board System. Yet Jackson and his business were not only
- innocent of any crime, but never suspects in the first place. The
- raid had been staged on the unfounded suspicion that somewhere in
- Jackson's office there "might be" a document compromising the
- security of the 911 telephone system.
- In the months that followed,
- Jackson saw the business he had built up over many years dragged to
- the edge of bankruptcy. SJG was a successful and prestigious
- publisher of books and other materials used in adventure role-playing
- games. Jackson also operated a computer bulletin board system (BBS)
- to communicate with his customers and writers and obtain feedback and
- suggestions on new gaming ideas. The bulletin board was also the
- repository of private electronic mail belonging to several of its
- users. This private mail was seized in the raid. Despite repeated
- requests for the return of his manuscripts and equipment, the Secret
- Service has refused to comply fully.
- Today, more than a year after that raid, The Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, acting with SJG owner Steve Jackson, has filed
- a precedent setting civil suit against the
- United States Secret Service, Secret Service Agents Timothy Foley and
- Barbara Golden, Assistant United States Attorney William Cook, and
- Henry Kluepfel.
- "This is the most important case brought to date,"
- said EFF general counsel Mike Godwin, "to vindicate the
- Constitutional rights of the users of computer-based communications
- technology. It will establish the Constitutional dimension of
- electronic expression. It also will be one of the first cases that
- invokes the Electronic Communications Privacy Act as a shield and
- not as a sword -- an act that guarantees users of this digital
- medium the same privacy protections enjoyed by those who use the
- telephone and the U.S. Mail."
- Commenting on the overall role of the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation in this case and other matters, EFFs
- president Mitch Kapor said, "We have been acting as an organization
- interested in defending the wrongly accused. But the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation is also going to be active in establishing
- broader principles. We begin with this case, where the issues are
- clear. But behind this specific action, the EFF also believes that
- it is vital that government, private entities, and individuals who
- have violated the Constitutional rights of individuals be held
- accountable for their actions. We also hope this case will help
- demystify the world of computer users to the general public and
- inform them about the potential of computer communities."
-
- Representing Steve Jackson and The Electronic Frontier
- Foundation in this suit are Harvey A. Silverglate and Sharon L. Beckman
- of Silverglate & Good of Boston; Eric Lieberman and Nick Poser of
- Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky & Lieberman of New York;
- and James George,Jr. of Graves, Dougherty, Hearon & Moody of Austin,
-
- Copies of the complaint, the unlawful search warrant,
- statements by Steve Jackson and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
- legal fact sheet and other pertinent materials are available by
- request from the EFF.
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- @+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@
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- Also made available to members of the press and electronic media on
- request were the following statement by Mitchell Kapor and a legal
- fact sheet prepared by Sharon Beckman and Harvey Silverglate of
- Silverglate & Good, the law firm central to the filing of this
- lawsuit.
-
-
- WHY THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION IS BRINGING SUIT ON BEHALF OF
- STEVE JACKSON.
-
-
- With this case, the Electronic Frontier Foundation begins a new
- phase of affirmative legal action. We intend to fight for broad
- Constitutional protection for operators and users of computer
- bulletin boards.
-
- It is essential to establish the principle that computer bulletin
- boards and computer conferencing systems are entitled to the same
- First Amendment rights enjoyed by other media. It is also critical
- to establish that operators of bulletin boards -- whether
- individuals or businesses -- are not subject to unconstitutional,
- overbroad searches and seizures of any of the contents of their
- systems, including electronic mail.
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation also believes that
- it is vital to hold government, private entities, and individuals
- who have violated the Constitutional rights of others accountable
- for their actions.
-
-
- Mitchell Kapor,
- President, The Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
-
- @+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@+@
-
-
- LEGAL FACT SHEET: STEVE JACKSON GAMES V. UNITED STATES SECRET
- SERVICE, ET AL
-
-
- This lawsuit seeks to vindicate the rights of a small, successful
- entrepreneur/publisher to conduct its entirely lawful business, free
- of unjustified governmental interference. It is also the goal of
- this litigation to firmly establish the principle that lawful
- activities carried out with the aid of computer technology, including
- computer communications and publishing, are entitled to the same
- constitutional protections that have long been accorded to the print
- medium. Computers and modems, no less than printing presses,
- typewriters, the mail, and telephones -being the methods selected by
- Americans to communicate with one another -- are all protected by our
- constitutional rights.
-
-
- Factual Background and Parties:
-
- Steve Jackson, of Austin, Texas, is a successful small businessman.
- His company, Steve Jackson Games, is an award- winning publisher of
- adventure games and related books and magazines. In addition to its
- books and magazines, SJG operates an electronic bulletin board system
- (the Illuminati BBS) for its customers and for others interested in
- adventure games and related literary genres.
-
- Also named as plaintiffs are various users of the Illuminati BBS.
- The professional interests of these users range from writing to
- computer technology.
-
- Although neither Jackson nor
- his company were suspected of any criminal activity, the company was
- rendered a near fatal blow on March 1, 1990, when agents of the
- United States Secret Service, aided by other law enforcement
- officials, raided its office, seizing computer equipment necessary to
- the operation of its publishing business. The government seized the
- Illuminati BBS and all of the communications stored on it, including
- private electronic mail, shutting down the BBS for over a month. The
- Secret Service also seized publications protected by the First
- Amendment, including drafts of the about-to-be-released role playing
- game book GURPS Cyberpunk. The publication of the book was
- substantially delayed while SJG employees rewrote it from older
- drafts. This fantasy game book, which one agent preposterously
- called "a handbook for computer crime," has since sold over 16,000
- copies and been nominated for a prestigious game industry award. No
- evidence of criminal activity was found.
-
- The warrant application,
- which remained sealed at the government's request for seven months,
- reveals that the agents were investigating an employee of the company
- whom they believed to be engaged in activity they found questionable
- at his home and on his own time. The warrant application further
- reveals not only that the Secret Service had no reason to think any
- evidence of criminal activity would be found at SJG, but also that
- the government omitted telling the Magistrate who issued the warrant
- that SJG was a publisher and that the contemplated raid would cause a
- prior restraint on constitutionally protected speech, publication,
- and association.
-
- The defendants in this case are the United States
- Secret Service and the individuals who, by planning and carrying out
- this grossly illegal search and seizure, abused the power conferred
- upon them by the federal government. Those individuals include
- Assistant United States Attorney William J. Cook, Secret Service
- Agents Timothy M. Foley and Barbara Golden, as well Henry M. Kluepfel
- of Bellcore, who actively participated in the unlawful activities as
- an agent of the federal government.
-
- These defendants are the same
- individuals and entities responsible for the prosecution last year of
- electronic publisher Craig Neidorf. The government in that case
- charged that Neidorf's publication of materials concerning the
- enhanced 911 system constituted interstate transportation of stolen
- property. The prosecution was resolved in Neidorf's favor in July of
- 1990 when Neidorf demonstrated that materials he published were
- generally available to the public.
-
-
- Legal Significance:
-
-
- This case is about the constitutional and statutory rights of
- publishers who conduct their activities in electronic media rather
- than in the traditional print and hard copy media, as well as the
- rights of individuals and companies that use computer technology to
- communicate as well as to conduct personal and business affairs
- generally.
-
- The government's wholly unjustified raid on SJG, and
- seizure of its books, magazines, and BBS, violated clearly
- established statutory and constitutional law, including:
-
-
- . The Privacy Protection Act of 1980, which generally prohibits
- the government from searching the offices of publishers for work
- product and other documents, including materials that are
- electronically stored;
-
-
- . The First Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, which guarantees
- freedom of speech, of the press and of association, and which
- prohibits the government from censoring publications, whether in
- printed or electronic media.
-
-
- . The Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable governmental
- searches and seizures, including both general searches and searches
- conducted without probable cause to believe that specific evidence of
- criminal activity will be found at the location searched.
-
-
- . The Electronic Communications Privacy Act and the Federal
- Wiretap statute, which together prohibit the government from seizing
- electronic communications without justification and proper
- authorization.
-
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- ####
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- For more information, contact Gerard Van der Leun at 617-864-1550.
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- END OF EFFECTOR ONLINE 1.04
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