Obama administration urges freer access to cellphone records

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress should pass a law to give investigators freer access to certain cellphone records, an Obama administration official said on Thursday, in remarks that raised concern among advocates of civil liberties and privacy.

Jason Weinstein, a deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's criminal division, argued that requirements for warrants at early stages of investigations would "cripple" prosecutors and law enforcement.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled this year that a warrant was needed to put a GPS satellite tracking device on a suspect's vehicle, prompting questions about other instances where probable-cause warrants should be needed to obtain information in the rapidly changing world of mobile devices.

Federal courts around the country are split on whether to require warrants for records of phone usage collected at towers that transmit cellphone signals, Weinstein told a conference.

Read the rest of the story at Reuters.com.


Comments

advertisement

WASHINGTON & WALL STREET: JOBS, CREDIT, AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

Last week, a raft of economic data came out that confirms what all of us already know, namely that the US economy is growing far more slowly than before the 2008 financial crisis. Most politicians and economists tell us that the economy will eventually grow faster, but is this really true?

Full Article

Send A Tip

advertisement

Breitbart Video Picks

Fox News National

advertisement

Sign up for our newsletter

advertisement

From Our Partners