Re: Leahy bill nightmare scenario?
At 12:01 PM 3/11/96 -0800, Timothy C. May wrote:
At 11:12 AM 3/11/96, Gary Howland wrote:
Dan Weinstein writes:
If I rent cars, someone might one day use a car rented from me in a robbery. Does that make my an accessary? NO.
This is an unfair analogy. Now if you had said that you rented cars without asking for proof of identification, thus making your car hire centre very useful to robbers, that may more closely resemble the anon-remailer situation.
If a hotel rents a room to someone who commits a crime in that room, e.g., prostitution, drug use, plotting to blow up a building, can the hotel be seized under the asset forfeiture laws? Not that I have heard.
Your example is so misleading that it's wrong. Cities generally attack motels by threatening to pull their licenses, which is usually called an "administrative process" and thus few of the usual protections apply.
Does it matter if the hotel fails to extensively check identification? (Hint: Rarely have I had my ID checked. Sometimes they ask for a driver's license and write down the number...and we all know how easy it is to get fake DLs. Mostly they don't.)
They do if they've been harassed by the city, for example Portland Oregon to name the closest example I know.
If I lend my chain saw to my next-door neighbor without confirming his identity, and he carves up his wife, am I liable? Not in these parts.
"Criminally", probably not. Civilly, probably if the victim's family has a good enough lawyer.
(If I lend my chain saw to a ranting, foaming maniac, am I liable? Perhaps.)
Actually, then you're CRIMINALLY liable, as well.
If I let someone use my telephone without confirming his identity, am I liable for crimes committed with this phone? This last example is, I submit, a nearly perfect parallel to anonymous remailers. And not because the telephone system is a "common carrier," but because of scienter: I have no knowledge, and cannot be expected to have knowledge, of crimes committed with my phone.
Actually, that's wrong. The question will be asked, "Do you regularly lend your phone to strangers who you can't even see, no questions asked, without listening in to see that nothing untoward is being plotted?" _THAT's_ a more apt analogy.
If I have visitors at my house, perhaps at a party, and I let a stranger go ahead and make a call from the phone in a bedroom, for example, and he plans a drug deal, can my house be automatically seized? Not that I have ever heard about.
If your phone was already tapped, and the delivery occurred in your house, you'd better look for new accomodations.
Maybe so, but if this ever happens, expect an outcry against the asset forfeiture laws that will make Linda Thompson's protest seem tame.
I prefer not to wait until the Pollyannas of this world have been proven wrong.
Now if I operate a pay phone and encourage dealers and pimps to use it, then maybe the public nuisance, RICO, or "crack house" laws can be used to shut it down. (The public nuisance laws are what I would look to to see remailers shut down, which will just move them offshore, of course. Absent laws about sending encrypted packets outside the country, nothing can be done.)
Justa sec: The Leahy bill makes "encryption furtherance of a felony" illegal. Sending encrypted packets out of the country, containing material you don't know (because they're encrypted) sounds like a classic opportunity to declare you in violation of some "conspiracy to violate the law" of some OTHER country, which is probably considered a Federal felony. Welcome to prison, Tim. Your optimism will serve you well, there. BTW, it is clear that you haven't yet read Mr. Junger's analysis of the bill. Nobody except a government stooge could read that and not wonder why anybody would support that bill. A complete re-write is called for. Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com
On Mon, 11 Mar 1996, jim bell wrote:
At 12:01 PM 3/11/96 -0800, Timothy C. May wrote:
If I lend my chain saw to my next-door neighbor without confirming his identity, and he carves up his wife, am I liable? Not in these parts.
"Criminally", probably not. Civilly, probably if the victim's family has a good enough lawyer.
This is a load of hooey. I don't know How Mr. Bell thinks the law works in the United States, but I do know it has so little basis in reality as to be laughable. I'm sure Mr. Bell will ask me now to cite three cases which indicate that lending a chainsaw to someone without asking for ID is negligant.
(If I lend my chain saw to a ranting, foaming maniac, am I liable? Perhaps.)
Actually, then you're CRIMINALLY liable, as well.
I would laugh out loud if I didn't think some people were taking Mr. Bell seriously.
If I let someone use my telephone without confirming his identity, am I liable for crimes committed with this phone? This last example is, I submit, a nearly perfect parallel to anonymous remailers. And not because the telephone system is a "common carrier," but because of scienter: I have no knowledge, and cannot be expected to have knowledge, of crimes committed with my phone.
Actually, that's wrong. The question will be asked, "Do you regularly lend your phone to strangers who you can't even see, no questions asked, without listening in to see that nothing untoward is being plotted?" _THAT's_ a more apt analogy.
Medication time... medication time.
If I have visitors at my house, perhaps at a party, and I let a stranger go ahead and make a call from the phone in a bedroom, for example, and he plans a drug deal, can my house be automatically seized? Not that I have ever heard about.
If your phone was already tapped, and the delivery occurred in your house, you'd better look for new accomodations.
Delivery is another matter, but the judge that affirms the seizure of a house on the basis of a single delivery to a guest in the residence will be politely asked to leave the bench. Unless the guest has some ownership of the house.... But did we expect Mr. Bell to actually be correct at this point?
Now if I operate a pay phone and encourage dealers and pimps to use it, then maybe the public nuisance, RICO, or "crack house" laws can be used to shut it down. (The public nuisance laws are what I would look to to see remailers shut down, which will just move them offshore, of course. Absent laws about sending encrypted packets outside the country, nothing can be done.)
Justa sec: The Leahy bill makes "encryption furtherance of a felony" illegal. Sending encrypted packets out of the country, containing material you don't know (because they're encrypted) sounds like a classic opportunity to declare you in violation of some "conspiracy to violate the law" of some OTHER country, which is probably considered a Federal felony.
Mr. Bell, I suggest you take a correspondence course. Perhaps the one on T.V. with Sally Struthers. I believe they offer "Legal Secretary" as an option. You would about double your practical knowledge of the law in this fashion. I STRONGLY suggest that readers afford Mr. Bell's writings and conclusions a healthy degree of skepticism.
Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com
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