United States v. Aaron Swartz | |
---|---|
Court | United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts |
Full case name | United States of America v. Aaron Swartz |
Defendant | Aaron Swartz |
Prosecution | |
Citation(s) | 1:11-cr-10260 |
Court membership | |
Judge(s) sitting | Nathaniel M. Gorton |
In United States of America v. Aaron Swartz, Aaron Swartz, an American computer programmer, writer, political organizer and Internet activist, was prosecuted for multiple violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986 (CFAA), after downloading academic journal articles through the MIT computer network from a source (JSTOR)
for which he had an account as a Harvard research fellow. Facing trial
and the possibility of imprisonment, Swartz committed suicide, and the
case was consequently dismissed.[1][2][3]
On January 6, 2011, Swartz was arrested by MIT Police on state breaking-and-entering charges, in connection with the systematic downloading of academic journal articles from JSTOR.[4][5][6][7] Federal prosecutors eventually charged him with two counts of wire fraud and eleven violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act,[8] charges carrying a cumulative maximum penalty of $1 million in fines plus 35 years in prison, asset forfeiture, restitution and supervised release.[9]
On January 11, 2013, two years after his initial arrest, Swartz was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment, where he had hanged himself.[10][11][12]
JSTOR is a digital repository that archives − and disseminates online −
manuscripts, GIS systems, scanned plant specimens and content from academic journal articles.[13] Swartz was a research fellow at Harvard University, which provided him with a JSTOR account. Visitors to MIT's "open campus" were authorized to access JSTOR through its network.[14]
According to state and federal authorities, Swartz downloaded a large number[i] of academic journal articles from JSTOR through MIT's computer network,
over the course of a few weeks in late 2010 and early 2011.[5] They said Swartz downloaded the documents to a laptop computer connected to a networking switch in a controlled-access wiring closet.[15][16][17][18] According to press reports, the door to the closet was kept unlocked.[19][20][21]
On January 6, 2011, Swartz was arrested near the Harvard campus[6][22] by two MIT police officers and a U.S. Secret Service agent. He was arraigned in Cambridge District Court on two state charges of breaking and entering with intent to commit a felony.[4][5][18][23]
On July 11, 2011, Swartz was indicted in federal District Court on four felony counts: wire fraud, computer fraud, unlawfully obtaining information from a protected computer and recklessly damaging a protected computer.[1][7][24][25]
On November 17, 2011, Swartz was indicted by a Middlesex County
Superior Court grand jury on state charges of breaking and entering with
intent, grand larceny and unauthorized access to a computer network.[26][27]
On December 16, 2011, the district attorney's office filed a nolle prosequi declaration in the case generated by Swartz's initial January 6, 2011 arrest.[5] The state charges against Swartz stemming from the November 17, 2011 indictment were dropped on March 8, 2012.[28] The state charges were dropped due to a deal being reached in which the data was returned by Swartz. [28] A report later submitted to the president of MIT about the Swartz case
suggests, however, that Massachusetts state law required the Middlesex
district attorney to dismiss the charges after the Boston U.S.
Attorneys' Office and the Secret Service failed to promptly hand over
evidence requested by Swartz's attorney during the Massachusetts case's
discovery process.[29]
Writing in Massachusetts Lawyers' Weekly, Harvey Silverglate reported that lawyers familiar with the original case told him they had
expected it to be dismissed after a "'continuance without a finding'
... The charge [would be] held in abeyance ... without any verdict ...
for a period of a few months up to maybe a couple of years."[30] After the publication of his Massachusetts Lawyers' Weekly piece, Silverglate explained to CNET's
Declan McCullagh that if the defendant manages to stay out of further
legal trouble after such a continuance, the case is typically dismissed.[31] "Tragedy intervened," Silverglate had written, "when [U.S. Attorney
Carmen] Ortiz's office took over the case to 'send a message.'"[30]
According to Verge reporter Jeff Blagdon[32] and the Huffington Post,[33] federal rather than local prosecutors had been "calling the shots" on
the prosecution of the case since Swartz's arrest. Both cited a letter
from Swartz's attorneys to the Department of Justice.[34]
The lead prosecutor in Mr. Swartz's [federal] case, AUSA Stephen Heymann ... and [Secret Service] Agent Pickett directed and controlled the investigation of Mr. Swartz from the time of [his] arrest on January 6 ... Heymann's involvement in the case had commenced very early in the investigation.[34]
On April 13, 2011, as part of their investigation, federal authorities interviewed Swartz's former partner, Wired journalist Quinn Norton; she penned an article, "Life Inside the Aaron Swartz Investigation," detailing her experiences in the case.[35][36]
I mentioned ... a two-year-old public post on ... Aaron's blog. It had been fairly widely picked up by other blogs. I couldn't imagine that these people who had just claimed to have read everything I'd ever written had never looked at their target's blog, which appeared in his FBI file, or searched for what he thought about "open access." They hadn't.So this is where I was profoundly foolish. I told them about the Guerilla Open Access Manifesto. And in doing so, Aaron would explain to me later (and reporters would confirm), I made everything worse.[35]
On July 19, 2011, the July 11th federal indictment[1][7][24] was unsealed, charging Swartz with two counts of fraud and two counts related to accessing and damaging a protected computer.[1][25] According to the indictment, Swartz surreptitiously attached a laptop
to MIT's computer network, which ran a script named "keepgrabbing.py",[1][7] allowing him to "rapidly download an extraordinary volume of articles from JSTOR."[1][37] Prosecutors in the case said Swartz acted with the intention of making the papers available on P2P file-sharing sites.[1][15]
Swartz surrendered to authorities, pleading not guilty on all counts, and was released on $100,000 unsecured bail.[38] After his arrest, JSTOR released a statement saying that though it
considered Swartz's access to be a "significant misuse" committed in an
"unauthorized fashion," it would not pursue civil litigation against
him;[16][38] MIT did not comment on the proceedings.[39]
The New York Times wrote of the case: "a respected Harvard
researcher who also is an Internet folk hero has been arrested in
Boston on charges related to computer hacking, which are based on
allegations that he downloaded articles that he was entitled to get
free."[38] The Awl similarly commented that "Swartz is being charged with hacker crimes,
not copyright-infringement crimes, because he didn't actually distribute
any documents, plus JSTOR didn't even want him prosecuted."[40]
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Stephen Heymann and Scott Garland were the lead prosecutors, working under the supervision of U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz.[1][17][41] The case was brought under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which was
passed in 1986 to enhance the government's ability to prosecute hackers
who accessed computers to steal information or to disrupt or destroy
computer functionality.[42][43] "If convicted on these charges," said Ortiz, "Swartz faces up to 35
years in prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release,
restitution, forfeiture and a fine of up to $1 million."[9]
On September 12, 2012, the prosecution filed a superseding indictment adding nine more felony counts.[8][44] George Washington University Law School Professor Orin Kerr, writing on the legal blog Volokh Conspiracy, opined that the risk of a maximum sentence in Swartz's case was not high.[45] In an interview with Boston's WBUR, retired federal judge Nancy Gertner said a sentence of 35 years for a case like Swartz's "never occurs."
She questioned the propriety of pressing these charges at all. Referring
to decision-making by Ortiz's office, she said "this is the example of
bad judgment I saw too often," suggesting that a two-year diversion
program leading to expunged charges would have been more fitting.[46]
Swartz's attorney, Elliot Peters,
stated that prosecutors at one point offered a plea deal of four months
in prison and pleading guilty to 13 charges, and warned that if Swartz
rejected the deal, future deals would be less attractive;[47] and that two days before Swartz's death, that "Swartz would have to
spend six months in prison and plead guilty to 13 charges if he wanted
to avoid going to trial."[48] Under the six-month deal, after Swartz pled guilty to the 13 charges,
the government would have argued for a six-month sentence, and Swartz
would have argued for a lesser sentence; the judge would then be free to
assign whatever sentence the judge thought appropriate, up to six
months.[49] Peters later filed a complaint with the DOJ's Office of Professional Responsibility,
stating that if Swartz didn't plead guilty, Heymann "threatened that he
would seek for Mr. Swartz to serve seven years in prison," a difference
in duration Peters asserts went "far beyond" the disparity encouraged
by the plea-bargain portion of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.[34]
Andy Good, Swartz's initial lawyer, told The Boston Globe:
"I told Heymann the kid was a suicide risk. His reaction was a standard
reaction in that office, not unique to Steve. He said, 'Fine, we'll
lock him up.' I'm not saying they made Aaron kill himself. Aaron might
have done this anyway. I'm saying they were aware of the risk, and they
were heedless."[50]
Marty Weinberg, who took the case over from Good, said he nearly
negotiated a plea bargain in which Swartz would not serve any time.
"JSTOR signed off on it," he said, "but MIT would not."[50]
Two days before his death, JSTOR announced on January 9, 2013
that it would make "more than 4.5 million articles" available to the
public free of charge. The "Register & Read" service, in beta for
the previous 10 months, was capped at three articles every two weeks (78
per year), readable online only, with some downloadable for a fee.[51][52]
After his death, Ortiz's office dismissed the charges against Swartz.[2][3] She said, "This office's conduct was appropriate in bringing and
handling this case ... This office sought an appropriate sentence that
matched the alleged conduct—a sentence that we would recommend to the
judge of six months in a low security setting ... At no time did this
office ever seek—or ever tell Mr. Swartz's attorneys that it intended to
seek—maximum penalties under the law."[53][54]
On January 12, 2013, Alex Stamos, a computer forensics investigator employed by the Swartz legal defense team, posted an online summary of the expert testimony he had been prepared to present in the JSTOR case, had Swartz lived to see trial. He wrote:
If I had taken the stand as planned and had been asked by the prosecutor whether Aaron's actions were "wrong," I would probably have replied that what Aaron did would better be described as "inconsiderate." In the same way it is inconsiderate ... to check out every book at the library needed for a History 101 paper. It is inconsiderate to download lots of files on shared wifi ...[55]
U.S.
Attorney Ortiz asserted after the 2011 indictment that "stealing is
stealing, whether you use a computer command or a crowbar, and whether
you take documents, data or dollars. It is equally harmful to the
victim, whether you sell what you have stolen or give it away."[9][40]
At a January 24, 2013 memorial for Swartz, Carl Malamud recalled their work with PACER. He noted that they had brought millions
of U.S. District Court records out from behind PACER's "pay wall" and
found them full of privacy violations.
We sent our results to the Chief Judges of 31 District Courts ... They redacted those documents and they yelled at the lawyers that filed them ... The Judicial Conference changed their privacy rules.
... [To] the bureaucrats who ran the Administrative Office of the United States Courts ... we were thieves ...
So they called the FBI ... [The FBI] found nothing wrong ...
"Was the overly aggressive posture of the Department of Justice
prosecutors and law enforcement officials," he asked, "revenge because
they were embarrassed that — in their view at least — we somehow got
away with something in the PACER incident? Was the merciless JSTOR
prosecution the revenge of embarrassed bureaucrats because they looked
stupid in the New York Times, because the U.S. Senate called them on the
carpet?"[56]
Former Nixon White House counsel John Dean wrote an article on the legal blog justia.com entitled "Dealing with Aaron Swartz in the Nixonian Tradition:
Overzealous Overcharging Leads to a Tragic Result", saying "these are
not people who are conscientiously and fairly upholding our federal
laws. Rather, they are typically authoritarian personalities who get
their jollies from shamelessly beating up on unfortunate people like
Aaron Swartz."[57]
George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr wrote on January 15, 2013 that "the charges brought here were pretty much what any good federal prosecutor would have charged."[58][59] Duke University law professor James Boyle replied in The Huffington Post:
"I think that in [Kerr's] descriptions of the facts [and of] the issues
surrounding prosecutorial discretion ... he tends ... to minimize or
ignore facts that might put [Swartz] in a more favorable light."[60]
In response to a piece by Larissa MacFarquhar in the New Yorker,
retired journalist Jane Scholz objected to what she perceived as an
effort "to turn Swartz into a hero for facing government prosecution
after hacking the JSTOR archive", arguing that "Swartz was apparently
familiar with laws protecting proprietary-information-management
systems, so he should not have been surprised by the severity of the
prosecution's response to his crime. It is a crime, and not a victimless
one. I am a retired journalist; during my working years, my salary
depended, and today my pension relies, on people paying for copyrighted
content. In recent years, as the business that supports journalism has
declined, thousands of journalists have lost pay, benefits, and,
ultimately, their jobs. [ ... ] I find it ironic that Swartz made
several million dollars selling the rights to his own copyrighted
programming to Conde Nast. Swartz's is a sad story, but it's not a
heroic one." Law professor Mike Maddison commented on Scholz's letter:
"it is difficult to find a better example of the glib equation of 'my
career isn't the success that it once was' and 'somebody committed a
crime' that infects contemporary dialogues about IP rights."[61]
David Aaronovitch noted in The Times that JSTOR was itself a "product of philanthropy" but that it had to charge access fees so that it could pay academic publishers for rights to their publications. He decried the "reckless" behavior of
a generation which "cannot be persuaded—yet—that copyright matters".[62]
In contrast, Peter Ludlow in The Chronicle of Higher Education argued that due to the publish or perish nature of academia and the importance that journals' reputations have,
"[w]hen an academic signs away copyright to an academic publisher, it
amounts to a 'contract of adhesion'—meaning a contract in which one
party has all the power and it was not freely bargained" and that "like
the original authors, JSTOR had to negotiate its licensing agreements
from a position of weakness", which Ludlow illustrated with a bargaining
agreement from JSTOR's history, which stipulated that the publishers
"be compensated if there was a loss to their (minimal) sales of rights
to older materials, and they demanded compensation even before JSTOR
covered its own expenses". Ludlow concluded that "Until academics get
their acts together and start using new modes of publication, we need to
recognize that actions like Aaron Swartz's civil disobedience are
legitimate."[63]
Rob Weir, who describes himself as an "associate editor of a very small journal", writes in Inside Higher Ed that "Many wonder why money accrues to those whose only 'creation' is
to aggregate the labor of others, especially when some form of taxpayer
money underwrote many of the articles. That's a legitimate concern, but
defending Swartz's method elevates vigilantism above the rules of law
and reason." While he concedes that "JSTOR charges university libraries a
king's ransom for its services", he also argues that "even a modest
journal is expensive to produce" and that "if you want anyone to read
your journal, you'll give it to JSTOR or some other aggregator. Unless,
of course, you can drum up lots of free advertising". He concludes that
the "information wants to be free" adage fails to account for the "hidden costs within the culture of free", and proposes that "there ain't no such thing as a free lunch" is the appropriate summary of production costs in the Information Age, which he transmutes to "if you can't do the time, don't do the crime" for "hackers and info thieves".[64]
Tim Wu, writing in The New Yorker,
called out what he perceived as lack of proportionality, writing that
"The act was harmless — [ ... ] meaning that there was no actual
physical harm, nor actual economic harm. The leak was found and plugged;
JSTOR suffered no actual economic loss. It did not press charges. Like a
pie in the face, Swartz's act was annoying to its victim, but of no
lasting consequence."[65] Wu went on to compare Swartz's act with that of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak,
who, according to Wu, "in the nineteen-seventies, committed crimes
similar to, but more economically damaging than, Swartz's. Those two men
hacked AT&T's telephone system to make free long-distance calls,
and actually sold the illegal devices (blue boxes) to make cash. Their mentor, John Draper,
did go to jail for a few months (where he wrote one of the world's
first word processors), but Jobs and Wozniak were never prosecuted.
Instead, they got bored of phreaking and built a computer. The great ones almost always operate at the edge"
writes Wu, in support of this thesis that "We can rightly judge a
society by how it treats its eccentrics and deviant geniuses—and by that
measure, we have utterly failed [in the case of Swartz]."[66]
After Boyle's Huffington Post column, Kerr returned to the topic, advocating reform of the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) under which Swartz was prosecuted. "The
problem raised by the Swartz case is ... [that] felony liability under
the statute is triggered much too easily. The law needs to draw a
distinction between low-level crimes and more serious crimes, and
current law does so poorly ..."[67]
Chris Soghoian, a technology policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union,
argued similarly, "Existing laws don't recognise the distinction
between two types of computer crimes: malicious crimes committed for
profit ... and cases where hackers break into systems to prove their
skillfulness or spread information that they think should be available
to the public."[68] Jennifer Granick, Director of Civil Liberties at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, both defended Swartz and challenged the scope of the law under which he was prosecuted.[69][70]
Law professor Stephen L. Carter agrees that the prosecution of Swartz was ridiculous, but also lays the
blame on Congress for creating a new type of federal felony roughly
every week.[71] Carter considers that the CFAA is a good example of this phenomenon. He
writes: "Enacted in the 1980s, before the Internet explosion, the
statute makes a criminal of anyone who 'intentionally accesses a
computer without authorization or exceeds authorized access' and, in the
process, obtains financial information, government information or
'information from any protected computer.'"
Carter then gives the following example: "You're sitting in your
office, when suddenly you remember that you forgot to pay your Visa
bill. You take a moment to log on to your bank account, and you pay the
bill. Then you go back to work. If your employer has a policy
prohibiting personal use of office computers, then you have exceeded
your authorized access; since you went to your bank website, you have
obtained financial information. Believe it or not, you're now a felon.
The likelihood of prosecution might be small, but you've still committed
a crime." Carter further writes that the problem with the statute was
well-known, and that "some federal courts have given the statute's
language a narrow construction, but others have read it broadly, and the Obama administration has opposed efforts in Congress to narrow its scope. Alex Kozinski,
chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, warned
in an opinion last spring [of 2012] the government's position 'would
make criminals of large groups of people who would have little reason to
suspect they are committing a federal crime.'"[72]
In 2013, Zoe Lofgren and Ron Wyden have advanced a legislative proposal called "Aaron's Law"
to amend the CFAA in order to eliminate the aforementioned vagueness
and also eliminate the "redundant provisions that enable a person to be
punished multiple times ... for the same crime".[73] In an opinion piece for Wired magazine, they wrote that "This is, in fact, what happened to Aaron
Swartz — more than a third of the charges in the superseding indictment
against him were under this redundant CFAA provision."[73]
Speaking at his son's funeral, Robert Swartz said, "[Aaron] was
killed by the government, and MIT betrayed all of its basic principles."[74] Mitch Kapor posted the statement on Twitter.[75] Carmen Ortiz's husband, IBM executive Tom Dolan, replied through his
own Twitter feed, @TomJDolan, "Truly incredible that in their own son's
obit they blame others for his death and make no mention of the 6 month
offer."[76] In Esquire, Charlie Pierce wrote that "the glibness with which her husband and her defenders toss
off a 'mere' six months in federal prison, low-security or not, is a
further indication that something is seriously out of whack with the way
our prosecutors think these days."[77]
Contacted by The Guardian, Ortiz's spokesperson had "no comment" to make on the matter;[76] Reuters reported being unable to contact Dolan.[78] On January 16, 2013, Ortiz released an official statement, in which she
reiterated that "I must, however, make clear that this office's conduct
was appropriate in bringing and handling this case," and that her
subordinates "took on the difficult task of enforcing a law they had
taken an oath to uphold, and did so reasonably."[78]
On January 28, 2013, the lawyers for Swartz's estate sent a
letter to the Justice Department accusing Assistant U.S. Attorney
Stephen Heymann of professional misconduct.[33][79] They said Heymann "may have misrepresented to the Court the extent of
the federal government's [early] involvement in the investigation."[80]
Emails and reports further illustrated ... that AUSA Heymann was himself involved in the investigation even before Mr. Swartz was arrested on January 6, 2011.[34]
The lawyers also said Heymann "abused his discretion when he attempted to coerce" Swartz into pleading guilty:[33][79][80]
Swartz ... naturally felt extreme pressure to waive his rights ... The difference between an offer of four months and a threat of seven years went far beyond the minimal reduction ... that should properly have applied for [a defendant's] "acceptance of responsibility" under the Sentencing Guidelines.[34][80]
On March 15, the lawyers asked the federal court to modify the
protective order on Swartz's file to permit public disclosure of the
discovery materials, including the names and titles of MIT, JSTOR and
law enforcement employees. The lawyers said that withholding the names
would make the documents "less intelligible and thus far less useful to
Congress."[81] The First Assistant U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts, Jack Pirozzolo,
said he was taking a role in the discussions and would be asking the
court to give the affected employees an opportunity to be heard on the
proposed disclosures.[81]
The Department of Justice sought to redact the names of the
prosecutors involved in the case. On April 3, 2013, a U.S. Attorney's
Office spokesperson said, "Our argument against it is that not only does
it have an effect on the people involved in the case, but there's also
sometimes a residual effect." The Attorney's Office reported threats and
hacking attempts against prosecutors already known to be involved:
"threatening emails" received by Ortiz and Heymann, the hacking of
Heymann's Facebook account and that "Heymann's father, a Harvard professor, received a postcard with his photo in a guillotine".[82] The postcard and some email excerpts were published by Wired magazine.[83]
On May 13, 2013, the court granted the estate's motion in part,
permitting public disclosure of much of the material the estate's
lawyers had sought to have unsealed, provided that the names of MIT and
government employees were first redacted. The estate's argument for
disclosure of these names was "substantially outweighed by the interest
of the government and the victims in shielding their employees from
potential retaliation," wrote Judge Nathaniel Gorton.[84] The judge also ruled that information disclosing details of computer network security at MIT should not be made public.[84] The prosecutors and Swartz's lawyers were ordered to propose the terms of the disclosures and redactions by May 27, 2013.[84]
Kevin Poulsen filed a FOIA lawsuit and in November 2013 obtained the release of 130 pages from the file that the US Secret Service has on Swartz, out of approximately 20,000 pages that the agency has in relation to Swartz.[85]
Of Heymann, BuzzFeed has noted: "Back in 2008, young hacker Jonathan James killed himself in the midst of a federal investigation led by the same prosecutor."[86]
In January 2013, WikiLeaks claimed through its Twitter account that Swartz had been in contact with Julian Assange through 2010 and 2011, and that Swartz may have been a source of leaked materials.[87] If true, this would offer an explanation as to why charges against
Swartz were pursued by the federal government despite JSTOR dropping
charges and urging that the government and MIT do the same.[88]
Swartz['s] alleged use of MIT facilities and Web connections to access the JSTOR database … resulted in two state felony charges for breaking into a 'depository' and breaking & entering in the daytime, according to local prosecutors.
Jan. 6, 2:20 p.m., Aaron Swartz, was arrested at 24 Lee Street as a suspect for breaking and entering….
JSTOR's integrated digital platform is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to … scholarly materials: journal issues …; manuscripts and monographs; …; spatial/geographic information systems data; plant specimens; …
'Suspect is seen on camera entering network closet' [in an unlocked building].… Within a mile of MIT … he was stopped by an MIT police captain and [U.S. Secret Service agent] Pickett.
The superseding indictment … claimed that Swartz had 'contrived to break into a restricted-access wiring closet at MIT.' But the closet door had been unlocked—and remained unlocked even after the university and authorities were aware that someone had been in there trying to access the school's network.
[Swartz] wrote a script that instructed his computer to download articles continuously, something that was forbidden by JSTOR's terms of service.… He spoofed the computer's address…. This happened several times. MIT traced the requests to his laptop, which he had hidden in an unlocked closet.
The wiring closet was not locked and was accessible to the public. If you look at the pictures supplied by the Government, you can see graffiti on one wall.
Swartz is accused … of stealing the articles by attaching a laptop directly to a network switch in … a 'restricted' room, though neither the police report nor the indictment [mentions] a door lock or signage indicating the room is off-limits.
Swartz … was indicted … in Middlesex Superior Court … for breaking and entering, larceny over $250, and unauthorized access to a computer network.
Swartz … was indicted today on charges of Breaking and Entering with Intent to Commit a Felony, Larceny over $250, and Unauthorized Access to a Computer Network by a Middlesex Superior Grand Jury.
After the state indictment, Martin Weinberg filed demands for discovery. In state prosecutions that involve joint investigations with outside law enforcement agencies or foreign jurisdictions, Massachusetts state law governing criminal discovery requires that the District Attorney obtain from those agencies and jurisdictions certain evidence that may be relevant to the case. Some of this evidence was in the sole possession of the Boston U.S. Attorney's Office and the U.S. Secret Service. Mr. Weinberg demanded this material as discovery from the DA's Office, and the USAO refused to produce it to that office. As a result, the DA's Office could not comply with the Massachusetts discovery laws so as to continue its prosecution, and it dismissed its charges.
Swartz's laptop … w[as] seized by the Cambridge Police Department on January 6th, 2011, when Swartz was first arrested ... Heymann had an email proving that the US Attorney's Office, ... not the Cambridge Police Department, was calling the shots on the search and seizure.
The handling of the case has already stunted the career of U.S. Attorney … Ortiz, who has become politically toxic and is no longer discussed seriously as a contender for judicial vacancies.
The [federal prosecutors] remarkably suggest … the Cambridge Police Department, not the Secret Service, was in possession of the computer equipment…. The Secret Service was plainly in charge of the investigation at MIT.
This is the example of bad judgment I saw too often." When asked if she was referring to the bad judgement of Carmen Ortiz, Gertner responded, "That's right.
The government provided no evidence that these downloads caused a negative effect on JSTOR or MIT, except due to silly overreactions such as turning off all of MIT's JSTOR access due to downloads from a pretty easily identified user agent.
[T]he bureaucrats who ran the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts … called the FBI…. They found nothing wrong.
JSTOR's attorney, Mary Jo White — formerly the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan — had called the lead Boston prosecutor in the case and asked him to drop it, said Peters.
Pirozzolo … has become involved in the Swartz case.
Threatening emails have been sent to … Ortiz and … Heymann.