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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Wed Mar 19, 2014, 04:02 PM Mar 2014

Federal Court Says FBI’s Secret GPS Tracking Memos Can Stay Secret

Back in January 2013, the ACLU managed to pry loose two secret memos on the FBI's GPS tracking from the DOJ with a FOIA request. The only problem was that the request didn't actually free much information. The responsive documents consisted of a few scattered paragraphs … and 111 pages of black ink.

The ACLU objected to this mockery of the words "freedom" and "information," noting that secret interpretations of existing laws is exactly the sort of thing the Freedom of Information Act was designed to discourage, not protect. So, the ACLU sued the government in hopes of being given something a little less redacted.

That legal battle is now over. And no additional information will be freed.

Yesterday, a federal district court ruled that the Justice Department does not need to disclose two secret memos providing guidance to federal prosecutors and investigators regarding the use of GPS devices and other location tracking technologies…

The Justice Department drafted the memos to address those open questions, but it claimed in court that it should not have to turn them over because they contain attorney work-product and sensitive law enforcement information. The district court disagreed in part, holding that government guidelines for the use of GPS tracking do not qualify as sensitive law enforcement information, because “Law enforcement’s use of GPS tracking is well known by the public.” But it concluded that the government may nevertheless keep the guidelines secret, on the ground that the results of DOJ’s reasoning “will be borne out in the courts.”


The documents apparently contain the DOJ's arguments for warrantless GPS tracking, but the American public won't be allowed to find out anything about the government's justification. Instead, the court has decided to take a hands-off approach and "allow" defendants to "discover" these arguments as they're presented in court. Or not, if the government decides its arguments are too super-sensitive to be released and pushes to present these justifications under seal.

MORE...

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/03/19/federal-court-says-fbis-secret-gps-tracking-memos-can-stay-secret/

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