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Can State created & funded orgs open email attachments w/o warrants? Retweet
New Supreme Court Justice, Neil Gorsuch, handed you another victory! But to realize the full potential of that victory, we’ll need to file an amicus curiae brief in the case…
United States v. Ackerman – involving an organization created, empowered, and funded by the federal government, opening an email attachment without a warrant.
Gorsuch was a judge on the 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Recently, he returned the Ackerman case to the district court with a list of specific issues to address. Paramount among the issues Gorsuch listed is the precedent established by the case Jones v. United States.
Please remember…
Alas, not all judges have gotten the word about Jones. So we’ve been attempting to educate the judicial system about the Jones precedent by filing as many Fourth Amendment briefs as we can. Now, Judge Gorsuch has given us another chance to do that in United States v. Ackerman.
The case is unseemly. Ackerman is alleged to have sent a sexually explicit picture of a child via email. But all Fourth Amendment cases involve criminal charges. The point to remember is that these cases are NOT about shielding guilty people. They’re about protecting the rights of innocent people. In other words…
The Fourth Amendment is about protecting YOU!
Sounds fine, right? Here’s the problem…
The government contends that the NCMEC is a private, charitable corporation, NOT a government institution. The NCMEC is therefore not bound by the Fourth Amendment. Thus…
The moment the NCMEC opened the picture and saw that it was evidence of a crime, the NCMEC had a right to turn that evidence over to the police, and the police had a right to receive it, just as they can receive evidence or testimony from any other private entity. Once again, that all seems to make sense, until you realize that Congress…
In other words, NCMEC is an arm of The State, and subject to the Fourth Amendment.
Judge Gorsuch and the 10th Circuit seem to agree. But victory shouldn’t be assumed. Someone has to argue for the Jones standard to be applied in U.S. v. Ackerman. We think that “someone” should be us. We uniquely provided the rationale for the Jones ruling. Let’s do it again!
Please make your best contribution to help fund this brief…
Thanks for being an ACTIVE DC Downsizer,
Jim Babka & Perry Willis Downsize DC Foundation & DownsizeDC.org, Inc.