ACLU
Seeks Records About Laptop Searches At The Border
Border Patrol
Policy Allows Officials To Search And Retain Information Without
Suspicion
NEW YORK
– June 10, 2009 - United
States Customs and Border Protection (CBP) policy permits
officials to search the laptops and other electronic devices of
travelers without suspicion of wrongdoing, according to a
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed today by the
American Civil Liberties Union. The ACLU filed the FOIA request
with CBP, a component of the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), to learn how CBP's suspicionless search policy, first
made public in July 2008, is impacting the constitutional rights
of international travelers.
"Based on current CBP policy,
we have reason to believe innumerable international travelers –
including U.S. citizens – have their most personal information
searched by government officials and retained by the government
indefinitely," said Larry Schwartztol, staff attorney with the
ACLU National Security Project. "The disclosure of these records
is necessary to better understand the extent to which U.S. border and customs officials
may be violating the Constitution."
In July 2008, CBP
issued its "Policy Regarding Border Search of Information,"
which permits CBP to subject travelers to suspicionless searches
of information contained in documents and electronic devices,
including laptop computers.
According to the
ACLU's request, giving the government unchecked authority to
search travelers' personal documents and electronic devices is a
violation of Fourth Amendment privacy rights and the First
Amendment freedoms of speech, inquiry and association.
"These highly intrusive government searches into a traveler's
most private information, without any reasonable suspicion, are
a threat to the most basic privacy rights guaranteed in the
Constitution," said Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the
ACLU First Amendment Working Group. "Searching or retaining a
traveler's personal information – especially the vast stores of
information contained in a laptop or other electronic storage
device – could also have a chilling effect on the free exchange
of ideas and beliefs."
The ACLU FOIA request seeks
records related to:
• CBP's authority to
search, review, retain and disseminate information possessed by
individuals who are encountered by CBP at the border;
•
the retention of documents or electronic devices by CBP,
including the number of documents or electronic devices
retained, the length of retention, the reasons for retention and
the ultimate disposition of retained material;
•
the dissemination of documents or electronic devices to other
components of DHS, other government agencies, or persons or
entities outside the government;
•
complaints filed by individuals or organizations affected by
CBP's policies or practices related to the search, review,
retention or dissemination of travelers' information;
• statistics reflecting the number of
travelers subject to suspicionless searches of their information
at the border; and
• statistics
reflecting the race, ethnicity, country of origin, citizenship
and gender of individuals subjected to suspicionless searches of
their information at the border.
The ACLU's FOIA request is available online
at:
www.aclu.org/freespeech/gen/39817lgl20090610.html
CONTACT: Rachel Myers, (212) 549-2689 or
2666;
media@aclu.org