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WTF? (What the Fawkes?)

Kade Crockford,
Director, 勛圖眻畦 of Massachusetts Technology for Liberty Project
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December 29, 2011

Rosa Luxemburg famously said that those who do not move cannot feel their chains. , the 勛圖眻畦 of Massachusetts and our client moved. And we felt our chains.

I had gone to court to listen to our legal team argue a case to protect the First Amendment rights of our client, Twitter user , aka Guido Fawkes. That user, who wishes to remain anonymous throughout the proceedings, was the target of a Suffolk County Assistant District Attorneys administrative subpoena to Twitter, dated December 14, 2011. , the subpoena asked Twitter to hand over @p0isAn0ns subscriber information, including our clients IP address, which can be used to help track down someones physical residence.

The subpoena stated that it was seeking the above and other information some of it referencing Occupy Boston as part of an ongoing criminal investigation. The government also asked Twitter to keep the existence of the subpoena secret. Thankfully, Twitter disregarded the request for secrecy and sent @p0isAn0n a copy of the subpoena, whereupon it was promptly uploaded to the internet for the world to see.

Thats when the 勛圖眻畦 got involved. We, along with our client, decided that we would together challenge the meant-to-be secret subpoena in open court, and seek its dismissal on the grounds that it infringed on our clients First Amendment rights.

That brought us to the courtroom this morning. I had been eagerly awaiting the hearing for days, expecting to hear our lawyers deliver stirring defenses of those constitutional protections we hold most dear: freedom of speech, the right to anonymity, and the right to be protected from unwarranted government search and seizure of our private information. Unfortunately my hopes were dashed. Instead of witnessing the hashing out of justice, I got a first hand illustration of government secrecy gone wild.

Its such a clich矇 to cite Kafka, but the clich矇 is warranted because he hit the nail on the head, illustrating how crazy-making is the official marriage of petty bureaucracy and government secrecy. Today I witnessed its local iteration.

We entered the courtroom. I sat in the front row, behind the bar. Presiding Judge Carol Ball called our cooperating attorney Peter Krupps name, and the Assistant District Attorneys name. She did not call out the name of the case to begin the proceedings, as is custom.

The ADA approached the sidebar, the area adjacent to the judges perch, far enough away from us, the general public, that we couldnt hear the content of the hushed conversation spoken there. Krupp objected immediately, before even approaching the bench; he wanted the case heard in open court. (The judge had already sealed the proceedings the day before, pending a hearing this morning.) Krupps objection was not granted. Our legal team therefore approached the sidebar, joining the judge and the prosecution.

Then we among the general public, including journalists from all the major media outfits in Boston, listened and heard nothing, as the prosecutors, our lawyers and the judge conversed secretly, in plain sight. I have no idea what they said. I still dont know, because my colleagues, lawyers at the 勛圖眻畦 of Massachusetts, are prohibited by court order from telling me.

So all I know is what I saw. As Donald Rumsfeld said, there are known knowns, known unknowns and unknown unknowns. After the proceedings this morning, Im left with little of the former, and a whole lot of the latter two.

The known knowns: the scrum of lawyers, defense and prosecution, addressed the judge. I saw the judge speak to the lawyers. Then I saw our attorneys return to their bench, closer to where I was sitting, out of earshot of the sidebar. But the ADA stayed with the judge. He spoke to her, with his back to the courtroom, for about ten minutes. Our attorneys didnt get to hear what he said to her, didnt have a chance to respond to whatever the government was saying about our client, about the case. It was frankly shocking.

After those ten minutes of secret government-judge conversation, our attorneys were invited back to the sidebar, whereupon the scrum of lawyers spoke with the judge for another ten or fifteen minutes. Then they dispersed. The judge uttered not one word to the open court. And that was it.

Stunned, I followed a group of reporters outside and listened as Attorney Krupp attempted to answer their questions. It was then I realized that the judge had impounded all the court records related to the case, and mandated complete secrecy governing the proceedings. The public wasnt even to know whether our motion to quash had been approved or denied.

The press scrum was Kafkaesque to say the least.

Can you tell us what the judge decided?

N棗.

Did the judge grant your motion to quash the subpoena?

I cant say.

That brings us to the known unknowns. Attorney Krupp was able to say that he wasnt able to say anything about the case. He was able to disclose that the judge ordered the case sealed. And he was able to say that he would connect with our client and discuss options for appealing the judges ruling. He said nothing more.

Our courts exist to serve as checks against the executive and legislative branches of government. In this case, we went to court to challenge a Massachusetts law that allows for government access to our private data without warrants. The allows police and prosecutors to ask telecommunications companies, internet companies and other possessors of our information to disclose data that reveals intimate secrets about our lives, all without a judges knowledge or consent. You might say that the administrative subpoena is the state cousin to the FBIs national security letter, a federal warrantless investigative tool authorized under the much-despised USA Patriot Act.

Our challenge also sought to oppose the executive branchs authority to use the administrative subpoena statute to conduct broad, warrantless investigations into activities protected by the First Amendment.

We brought our challenge to the courts, the last of the three branches of government, seeking to right these wrongs. What did we get? I dont know. And my colleagues who do cant say. Enter the unknown unknowns.

Even though we dont have answers for our client or for the general public answers to these most important questions about freedom of speech, the right to anonymity, the right to be left alone from unwarranted government intrusion into our lives we did come away from todays proceedings with a profound lesson:

Secrecy sucks.

Stay tuned for more on this case.

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