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Electronic media searches at border crossings raise worry

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Watchdog groups that keep tabs on digital privacy rights are concerned that U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents are searching the phones and other digital devices of international travelers at border checkpoints in U.S. airports. The American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation say complaints of such searches have spiked recently.

PORTLAND, Ore. >> Watchdog groups that keep tabs on digital privacy rights are concerned that U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents are searching the phones and other digital devices of international travelers at border checkpoints in U.S. airports.

The issue gained attention recently after at least three travelers, including a Canadian journalist, spoke out publicly about their experiences.

The episodes have gained notice amid an outcry over President Donald Trump’s travel ban and complaints of mistreatment of foreign travelers, but the government insists there has been no policy change in the new administration.

The Border Patrol says searches increased fivefold in the final fiscal year of the Obama presidency, but still amounted to less than one-hundredth of 1 percent of all international arrivals.

Here are some things to know about the searches and your privacy rights.

WHAT HAS PROMPTED THE CONCERN?

The American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation both say they have noticed an uptick in complaints about searches of digital devices by border agents.

The increase has become most noticeable in the last month, said Adam Schwartz, a senior staff lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

“We are concerned that a bad practice that has existed under past presidents has gotten worse in quantity under the new president,” Schwartz said.

The government says nothing has changed. Customs officials also say the perceived shift can be attributed to a jump in the number of electronic devices that people are carrying with them and shifting tactics as the agency adjusts to the amount and types of information that can be stored on today’s devices.

WHAT SEARCH AUTHORITY DOES THE BORDER PATROL HAVE?

Americans have protection under the Fourth Amendment from unreasonable search and seizure.

A police officer, for example, must obtain a warrant from a judge before searching a suspect’s phone.

But the U.S. border is a legal gray zone. Border agents have long had the right to search travelers’ physical luggage without a warrant, and that interpretation has been expanded to include digital devices, ACLU staff attorney Nathan Freed Wessler said.

In 2013, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that if agents want to do a forensic search they need to have a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing, he said. But the court stopped short of requiring agents to obtain a search warrant beforehand, he said.

And an agent can flip through a phone in a cursory search for any reason.

The law has not kept up with the “incredible volume of personal data that we have in our pockets now” — and that creates tremendous constitutional questions, said Wessler.

“In some ways, a search of your phone is more invasive than a search of your house,” he said.

A case currently headed to another appeals court could further clarify the law, said Schwartz.

WHAT DOES THE BORDER PATROL SAY?

Numbers provided by the Border Patrol show a fivefold increase in electronic media searches in the 2016 fiscal year ending on Sept. 30 over the previous fiscal year.

In 2016, under the Obama administration, there were 23,877 electronic media searches. That comes to .0061 percent of total arrivals into the U.S. In fiscal year 2015, there were 4,764 electronic media searches.

A senior CBP official briefed reporters on the issue Friday, but the agency insisted the official not be identified.

“We see it as an article that is brought into the U.S., no different than a booklet of materials, no different than a suitcase with items in it,” the official said.

“We’ve uncovered very serious and significant information in these types of searches, everything from national security concerns to child pornography to evidence of crimes to determinations of people’s admissibility status under the immigration laws.”

HOW CAN YOU PROTECT YOUR DIGITAL PRIVACY WHILE TRAVELING?

Privacy advocates say travelers who are concerned should leave their phones and laptops at home and buy a cheap phone once they arrive at their destination.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations is also advising its members to do the same.

Those who can’t leave their devices behind should encrypt them and close out of all social media applications so they aren’t accessible without a password, said Schwartz.

But those steps won’t matter much if a border agent asks a traveler to unlock the phone or provide a password, said Scwhartz.

And travelers should also be aware of the rules in other countries. Israel authorities can check mobile phones at the airport, for example.

WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU REFUSE?

The Border Patrol can’t bar a U.S. citizen from entry if they refuse to comply, but agents can make things difficult.

Travelers who don’t unlock their phones could be questioned, detained temporarily and have their phones taken by agents for days.

Travelers who are not U.S. citizens can be denied entry.

Hasaim Elsharkawi, a self-employed businessman from Anaheim, California, told the AP that he was stopped by agents in Los Angeles last week as he was boarding a plane to Saudi Arabia to make a pilgrimage to Mecca. They asked him to unlock his phone without telling him why.

Elsharkawi, a Muslim, said he refused because he didn’t want the male agents to see photos of his wife with her head uncovered.

When he asked for a lawyer, the agents detained him, handcuffed him and interrogated him for four hours before he agreed to unlock the device for a female agent, he said. He was then released and his phone was returned after the female Homeland Security officer checked his email, photos and eBay and Amazon accounts.

Elsharkawi, 34, was born in Saudi Arabia to Egyptian parents. He came to the U.S. in 2004 and became a U.S. citizen in 2012.

“I was already nervous before and after what has happened … I don’t know what to expect next,” he said.

16 responses to “Electronic media searches at border crossings raise worry”

  1. 64hoo says:

    go get them border agents and customs check them out Nerobama did it so trump can do it to but these crybabies are crying when trump does this but did not cry when Nerobama did it, that’s why the Anti Christian Liberty Union or [ACLU] are a bunch of lawyers with mental disorders and violate constitutional rights of all American Christians, and CAIR the Muslim brotherhoods front for radical Islam is a terrorist organization, lets go after CAIR who is trying to bring this country down. ACLU against our Judeo Christian values and CAIR who wants to destroy Christians go get them law enforcement, and will have a safer America.

    • 64hoo says:

      also I love my country and we should bring back our judeo chritian values that this country was founded on forget the ACLU there nothing, but CAIR and other Muslim terrorist Organizations are trying to bring us down and destroy our Christian way of life.

    • gary360 says:

      Amen to both of your comments!

    • klastri says:

      64hoo – So many mistakes … where to begin?

      Your comment about ACLU being against your religious values is simply ridiculous – although no more ridiculous than anything else you write. The ACLU and it’s very large network of volunteer lawyers steps in to protect anyone – of any religion – when government oversteps the bounds of the Constitution. No one at ACLU violates the “constitutional rights of all American Christians” so your complaint is just another of your fact-free rants.

      It would be so refreshing if you used facts just once. Can you muster up the will to do that?

  2. deepdiver311 says:

    and why not? they are doing their duty to #masa!
    aloha! imua president trump! God bless!

  3. deepdiver311 says:

    the aclu is a leftist organization that is only concerned with the freedom of the left. where were they at the cal berkeley riots protecting the rights of the first amendment of the invited speaker?
    auwe!

    • klastri says:

      I see that you still haven’t taken the 15 minutes it would require to learn what the ACLU is and what it does. Why does your willful ignorance not surprise me?

      Private citizens (not Cal Berkeley staff or students) prevented the speaker from continuing. That is not prior restraint by a government. The ACLU only acts when government oversteps its bounds. No government did that Cal Berkeley.

      You (finally) learned something. You’re welcome!

  4. livinginhawaii says:

    I think its ok to start taking away the rights that women have fought for. Hasaim Elsharkawi should be allowed to hide his wife from public, prevent her from driving, and keep her in the kitchen where she belongs. NOT.

    • klastri says:

      Why would you lie like this about Mr. Elsharkawi? You just made this up out of thin air and attributed your bigotry onto him.

      What compels people here to constantly lie?

      • livinginhawaii says:

        Um DUH I was being sarcastic. As Pink Floyd one sang, “Hellllo is there anybody in there?….” Based on what was said, “Elsharkawi, a Muslim, said he refused because he didn’t want the male agents to see photos of his wife with her head uncovered”. It appears that he does indeed require his wife to be covered in public, regardless of how she may or may not feel, and regardless of what women have fought for over the years. Shame on you for supporting a form of repression some men place on women in this day and age.

        • klastri says:

          Changing the subject always works.

          This article is about the government requiring United States citizens to expose their private property and private information for search without cause or a warrant. You can make it about Muslim headwear if you want, but that’s not the issue.

          You can shame me if you want, for knowing how to read. I accept your rebuke.

        • livinginhawaii says:

          DUH I know what the article was about – you completely missed my point – maybe I need to say it in a different way for the THIRD time – it is inappropriate to repress women in this day and age regardless of whether or not they want it.

  5. islandsun says:

    Not sure this article is not just hype. Nonetheless, anyone coming to the country should abide by the customs and border crossing laws or please go to another country that you deem better.

    • klastri says:

      Oh good grief. The issue of concern is what American citizens are being asked more frequently to do when they return to the United States. Americans who have traveled and are returning to the United States.

      Sheesh.

  6. Marauders_1959 says:

    Actions like this raises my confidence that border guards are minimizing terrorists and other “unwanted” from entering the U.S. of A.

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