It’s Beyond Ridiculous that We Have to Worry About This With the summer travel season imminent, the already hot (and recently explored) topic of warrantless searches at U.S. borders and ports of entry keeps getting hotter by the day. The latest twist comes from ZDNET, where David Berlind asks the age-old question: Biometric vs. Passcode? What, you were expecting “Plastic vs. Paper?” Seriously, it’s come to this: How do American citizens best thwart their own government from its attempts to violate our constitutional rights? Specifically, how do citizens prepare against warrantless searches of their personal devices at border crossings, as Customs and Border Patrol agents seem increasingly determined to carry out? The CliffsNotes version of ZDNET’s advice: The spoken word still matters (for now) relative to the Constitution, as in, “No person … shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” Speech existed when the Constitution was written; biometric tech (fingerprint scanning, facial recognition, etc.) did not. Put another way, being pressured to verbally recite your passcode could be construed as self-incrimination. So it is easier to refuse a request to speak it than to stand still and have your face open your device. But this much is sure: biometrics aren’t spoken, so that line to the Fifth Amendment is dotted at best. The same goes for Miranda. “The right to remain silent” is predicated on you actually remaining silent. As for the Fourth Amendment itself, the Supreme Court has yet to meaningfully clarify its 1985 declaration that the Fourth’s “balance of reasonableness is qualitatively different at the international border than in the interior.” In practice, this means warrantless searches of your devices coming through customs is allowed. Among the many unanswered questions, what constitutes a “routine” search? Is the biometric vs. passcode distinction a completely absurd technicality straight out of Monty Python? You bet your sweet privacy it is. But it’s also a gray area of unsettled law, so technicalities are currently one of our last defenses against this particular strain of government intrusion. Comments are closed.
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