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ZDNet > ZDNet News Page One > eCrime, Law & You > Wiretapping abuses alarm EFF, EPIC |
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UPDATED October 21, 1999 12:40 PM PT LOS ANGELES -- The Los Angeles Police Department and district attorney's office are covering up widespread and illegal wiretapping, the Los Angeles public defender's office charged Wednesday, in the latest round of a growing legal battle that's piqued the interest of electronic privacy advocates. John Gilmore, co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said the case shows why citizens need communications that are protected by encryption. "We have the metropolitan police department of one of the largest cities in America doing illegal wiretaps, and covering it up by falsifying the statistics," he said.
In November, Superior Court Judge Larry Fidler ordered prosecutors to end the practice, and to inform defendants who had been subject to secret wiretaps in the past. Deputy Public Defender Kathy Quant charged Wednesday that prosecutors violated that court order. DA's office is 'lying'
Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney Robert Schirn admitted to missing some cases in which wiretaps were used, but insisted that the office substantially complied with the court order. "It's an impossible burden, I think, to identify every case. We've done our best," Schirn told the court. Schirn also dismissed the public defender's allegations as speculation. "Some of these cases clearly don't involve wiretaps," he said. 'Hundreds' of people
recorded "This case shows that ordinary people need communications that are protected by encryption so they won't become victims of this official but illegal type of wiretapping," said EFF's Gilmore.
"They pretty much sucked everything down," said Banisar in an interview early this month. "There were some cases where they tapped pay phones and recorded literally hundreds of thousands of innocent people." "This case provides a good reason to reverse CALEA," says Gilmore, referring the 1994 Communication Assistance for Law Enforcement Act that requires phone companies to make wiretapping easier for all law enforcement agencies. "If you build an infrastructure that encourages wiretapping, it will be abused. The only question is, how many years or decades will it take to find out its been abused." Fidler set a date of Nov. 3 for testimony and evidence on the matter. Kevin Poulsen writes a weekly column for ZDTV's CyberCrime.
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