Posted on 06/07/2015 9:46:26 AM PDT by TaxPayer2000
Khairullozhon Matanov is a 24-year-old former cab driver from Quincy, Massachusetts. The night of the Boston Marathon bombings, he ate dinner with Tamerlan and Dhzokhar Tsarnaev at a kebob restaurant in Somerville. Four days later Matanov saw photographs of his friends listed as suspects in the bombings on the CNN and FBI websites. Later that day he went to the local police. He told them that he knew the Tsarnaev brothers and that theyd had dinner together that week, but he lied about whose idea it was to have dinner, lied about when exactly he had looked at the Tsarnaevs photos on the Internet, lied about whether Tamerlan lived with his wife and daughter, and lied about when he and Tamerlan had last prayed together. Matanov likely lied to distance himself from the brothers or to cover up his own jihadist sympathiesor maybe he was just confused.
Then Matanov went home and cleared his Internet browser history.
Matanov continued to live in Quincy for over a year after the bombings. During this time the FBI tracked him with a drone-like surveillance plane that made loops around Quincy, disturbing residents. The feds finally arrested and indicted him in May 2014. They never alleged that Matanov was involved in the bombings or that he knew about them beforehand, but they charged him with four counts of obstruction of justice. There were three counts for making false statements based on the aforementioned lies andremarkablyone count for destroying any record, document or tangible object with intent to obstruct a federal investigation. This last charge was for deleting videos on his computer that may have demonstrated his own terrorist sympathies and for clearing his browser history.
Matanov faced the possibility of decades in prisontwenty years for the records-destruction charge alone.
Federal prosecutors charged Matanov for destroying records under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a law enacted by Congress in the wake of the Enron scandal. The law was, in part, intended to prohibit corporations under federal investigation from shredding incriminating documents. But since Sarbanes-Oxley was passed in 2002 federal prosecutors have applied the law to a wider range of activities. A police officer in Colorado who falsified a report to cover up a brutality case was convicted under the act, as was a woman in Illinois who destroyed her boyfriends child pornography.
Prosecutors are able to apply the law broadly because they do not have to show that the person deleting evidence knew there was an investigation underway. In other words, a person could theoretically be charged under Sarbanes-Oxley for deleting her dealers number from her phone even if she were unaware that the feds were getting a search warrant to find her marijuana. The application of the law to digital data has been particularly far-reaching because this type of information is so easy to delete. Deleting digital data can inadvertently occur in normal computer use, and often does.
In 2010 David Kernell, a University of Tennessee student, was convicted under Sarbanes-Oxley after he deleted digital records that showed he had obtained access to Sarah Palins Yahoo e-mail account. Using publicly available information, Kernell answered security questions that allowed him to reset Palins Yahoo password to popcorn. He downloaded information from Palins account, including photographs, and posted the new password online. He then deleted digital information that may have made it easier for federal investigators to find him. Like Matanov, he cleared the cache on his Internet browser. He also uninstalled Firefox, ran a disk defragmentation program to reorganize and clean up his hard drive, and deleted a series of images that he had downloaded from the account. For entering Palins e-mail, he was eventually convicted of misdemeanor unlawfully obtaining information from a protected computer and felony destruction of records under Sarbanes-Oxley. In January 2012, the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit found that Kernells awareness of a potential investigation into his conduct was enough to uphold the felony charge.
At the time Kernell took steps to clean his computer, he does not appear to have known that there was any investigation into his conduct. Regardless, the government felt that they were entitled to that data, and the court agreed that Kernell was legally required to have preserved it.
Hanni Fakhoury, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, says the feds broad interpretation of Sarbanes-Oxley in the digital age is part of a wider trend: federal agents feeling entitled to digital data.
Fakhoury compares the broad application of Sarbanes-Oxley in the digital realm to the federal governments resistance to cellphone companies that want to sell encrypted phones that would prevent law enforcement from being able to access users data. When the new encrypted iPhone came out, FBI Director James Comey told reporters that he didnt understand why companies would market something expressly to allow people to place themselves beyond the law.
At its core, Fakhoury says, what the government is saying is, We have to create a mechanism that allows everybodys [cellphone] data to be open for inspection on the off-chance that one day in the future, for whatever random circumstance, we need to see that data.
Similarly, Fakhoury says the governments underlying theory in cases like Kernells is, Dont even think about deleting anything that may be harmful to you, because we may come after you at some point in the future for some unforeseen reason and we want to be able to have access to that data. And if we dont have access to that data, were going to slap an obstruction charge that has as 20-year maximum on you.
As more and more data are stored online, the government wants and believes it deserves access to that data for policing purposes. But Fakhoury disagrees.
The idea that you have to create a record of where youve gone or open all your cupboards all the time and leave your front door unlocked and available for law enforcement inspection at any time is not the country we have established for ourselves more than 200 years ago.
This past February the Supreme Court somewhat narrowed the scope of Sarbanes-Oxley in the case of Yates v. United States. The feds had charged a commercial fishing captain under the same record-destruction law for throwing a batch of undersized fish overboard after a federal agent had instructed him not to. The Court ruled that applying Sarbanes-Oxley to the dumping of fish was too far afield from the laws original corporate-crime purpose. Another Tsarnaev associate, Azamat Tazhayakov, who helped throw Tsarnaevs backpack full of fireworks into a dumpster, may see his conviction overturned because of the Yates decision.
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But it appears that, at least for now, cases like Matanovs and Kernells are still fair game. The Supreme Court did not answer the pressing question of how broadly federal prosecutors are allowed to use Sarbanes-Oxley in the digital age. Can you be prosecuted for deleting a potentially incriminating tweet? For uninstalling Firefox? For clearing your browser history? How much of their digital data should citizens have to preserve in case law enforcement wants to take a look?
In March, Matanov pleaded guilty to all four counts of obstruction of justice. When he entered his plea, he told Judge William G. Young that he maintains his innocence but fears a decades-long sentence were he to go to trial. His plea agreement with prosecutors calls for a 30-month sentencestill a harsh punishment for little more than deleting videos and clearing his browser history. Matanovs sentencing hearing is scheduled for June.
The whole case is mystery, Matanov has said. The FBI is trying to destroy my life.
Suppose you withdraw $500/week from ATMs over the course of a year. Is that suspicious activity?
Well put.
A free program, ccleaner, can not only clear you browser history, but clear the space with 35 overwrites of ones and zeros...just saying
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Yup. Three felonies a day like the book title says.
Nope. Not a high enough dollar amount to be considered anything near "suspicious" activity.
Banks are more concerned about withdrawls matching a pattern, and dollar amounts within a certain amount of $10k. Some banks are more "strict" than others about where that amount is as the Fed's don't give prescriptive guidance other than "$10k."
For the record, I think the law is stupid, and $10k isn't really that much money anymore. In 1970 dollars, it's more like $1,600. Drug dealers, etc.. launder money in far higher amounts than $10k and don't need banks to do it.
I use MRU-Blaster and CCleaner at the end of every day. You’d be amazed how much MRU-Blaster pulls out in a day.
https://www.brightfort.com/mrudownload.html
Of course I realized. It is a very old joke.
I wonder what the founding fathers would be doing by now?
I wonder what the founding fathers would be doing by now?
Shooting.
5.56mm
Shooting.
I believe you are correct sir. 😎
And there they got ya. Rand stated it best - they want to make so many things criminal that a person cannot go through one day without breaking a law.
Then those in power can choose whether to prosecute you or not,
based on various factors, including political loyalty.
You are one of the few [populationwise]that understands.
That's stupid. How many people are arrested and not tried or found not guilty of a crime in the US. With this you have an end around where you don't even have to nail someone with an initial crime. Just deleting browser history. If you don't think something like that could happen, see what the IRS, ATF and OSHA did someone who was trying to start a PAC.
Destroying evidence has been illegal for a long long time. I don’t even think it’s a new development to consider your browser history evidence. And yes they do have to have some reason to suspect you first, otherwise they’ve got no reason to think there’s evidence.
And I've been known to delete my browser history so my wife won't get the popups on her computer that tell her which gifts I'm looking at. Also being a Freeper, I investigate a lot of stories I read here and may go to some nefarious sites. If you put these two activities together I could to be guilty of a felony. With more and more people thinking like you we are close to embracing a police state.
No those facts don’t put you in line for a felony. It’s people thinking like you that make us look like paranoids with no grounding in reality. Evidence destruction laws are very well established with over 100 years of jurisprudence. This guy got in trouble specifically for deciding the evidence trail on his friends might go through his computer and deliberately destroying the evidence. Unless you’ve got some wrong doing you’re trying to hide there is NOTHING AT ALL illegal about clearing your history. This is known, understood, and documented, and trying to pretend like this case changed any of that is just making crap up.
And it's people like you who are totally blind to all the things the government and the judicial system are doing to take away our freedoms.
Again, over 100 years. The guy simply handled the situation incorrectly. If your friends blew something up and you think they might have looked up bomb stuff on your computer the absolute WRONG thing to do is clear your cash. Because once you decide to do that you ARE committing a crime (which has been a crime for a long time) and the only question left is whether you’ll get caught. Nobody is losing freedoms on this. And by grossly and deliberately mischaracterizing the situation you devalue complaints when they actually ARE taking away our freedoms. It’s a boy who cried wolf situation, this is not a wolf.
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