There are major flaws in how the federal government monitors police surveillance of Americans, a new government report found, representing the first time the federal court system has acknowledged its own failure to track things like wiretaps and electronic surveillance.
A study, conducted by the Federal Judicial Center, the research branch of the judicial branch of the U.S. government, says the federal court systemâs annual Wiretap Reportâwhich compiles information on local and federal law enforcement interceptions of peopleâs communicationsâis riddled with inaccuracies.
Reporting requirements, the study found, fail to incorporate new technologies, further leaving the public and lawmakers in the dark as to how police use devices like stingrays and how often they collect things like text messages and cellphone data.
Privacy and civil liberties advocates have long criticized the system for overseeing law enforcement surveillance, but never before has the judicial agency publicly acknowledged its own failings.
Every year, federal and state judges are required by law to report all the wiretap orders they approved to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, and prosecutors are also required to report wiretap orders they requested.
The office uses that data to send Congress the annual Wiretap Report, which helps inform decisions about law enforcement, surveillance, and data privacy issues.
For at least the last 15 years, legal experts, judges, and lawmakers have criticized the Wiretap Report for under-reporting the amount of wiretap orders that are actually issued and for failing to keep up with modern technology and surveillance techniques.
Albert Gidari, a retired lawyer who served as the consulting director of privacy at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society, has long called out the Wiretap Reportâs inaccuracies. He started in 2005 speaking out about the inefficacy of wiretaps at conferences, and then, in 2010, once companies started releasing transparency reports, he pointed out their inaccuracies.
In 2017, Gidari published a blog post highlighting how the Wiretap Report under-reported law enforcement surveillance. He found that while the Wiretap Report identified 3,554 phone wiretaps in 2014, phone carriers that same year reported receiving 10,712 wiretap orders.
Itâs not the sexiest issue that faces the country, but itâs still a really important oneâŚ. Our very privacy foundations are really at risk.
Albert Gidari, electronic surveillance expert
Gidari said that nothing has changed with the Wiretap Report since.
âItâs not the sexiest issue that faces the country, but itâs still a really important one, especially in a world where everything is collected,â Gidari said. âOur very privacy foundations are really at risk.â
He said the Judicial Center acknowledging these flaws was essential to taking steps to fixing the problem.
Between 2019 and 2021, the center conducted a series of focus groups and surveys split into two groups, one judiciary stakeholders like prosecutors, and judges, and the other non-judiciary stakeholders like academics, lawyers, civil rights groups, and congressional staff.
The study came after a 2017 letter from Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, directed the Judicial Conference, the policy-making body for the federal courts, to implement transparency reforms for electronic surveillance, including an update to the Wiretap Reportâs methodology.
Wyden said he plans to introduce legislation that will require similar reports on other surveillance methods.
The wiretap report is a relic from the last centuryâŚ.
Sen. Ron Wyden
âThe wiretap report is a relic from the last century that reports on surveillance of pagers and fax machines, instead of use of modern surveillance technology, like malware and stingrays,â Wyden said in an email to The Markup.
âThe courts deserve a lot of credit for taking on the process of updating the wiretap reports, but it is clear that Congress will also need to pass a new law requiring annual reports for other forms of surveillance, such as location tracking and demands for data stored in the cloud.â
While each focus group in the study had different concerns with the Wiretap Report, some common key issues surfaced. Both groups called for updates to the report to reflect surveillance on modern technology and for better enforcement against inaccuracies.
Outdated Technologies
The Wiretap Report became a legally required disclosure in 1968 with the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act. At the time, the only device that wiretaps were really intended for were landline phones.
But now wiretaps are mostly conducted on cellphones, and often phone data is included. Prosecutors and judges in the study said they couldnât accurately disclose their surveillance requests because the âtechnologies listed on the forms were not up to date,â according to the study.
While the Wiretap Report covers surveillance on phone calls, thereâs no transparency on surveillance on phone data, device location, messaging through texts or messenger apps, or online voice calls.
It also doesnât cover new methods of surveillance like geofence warrant requests or stingray devices that intercept phone data.
âThat type of surveillance is not being entered in a wiretap report, and it probably couldnât be under current legal authorities,â Stephen Wm. Smith, a retired federal magistrate judge and a former director of Fourth Amendment and Open Courts at Stanfordâs Center for Internet and Society, said.
âWe need to update our other surveillance laws to require reporting on the same level as wiretap reporting.â
Both Gidari and Smith participated in the study as non-judiciary stakeholders.
Prosecutors and judges said because the technologies covered were outdated, there was confusion over what they needed to report to the Wiretap Report. They recommended adding new technologies like communications apps and VoIP apps to the report.
âAll participants agreed that the statute (18 U.S.C. § 2519) is out of date with respect to modern communications technology, and that an update would resolve at least some of the confusion about what is to be reported and how,â the study said.
Inaccurate Reports
All participants in the study also said that the Wiretap Report was consistently inaccurate, even when it comes to more traditional wiretaps, raising further concerns that policymakers would make decisions based on flawed information.
Prosecutors and judges blamed a lack of standards for the inaccurate reports, noting that there is no central template to follow for these disclosures. For example, participants werenât sure if there needed to be a new wiretap issued for each phone number or device added to an investigation or if only an extension for an existing wiretap order was necessary, according to the study.
State prosecutors also said that they lacked training on how to file reports. And the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts has no way of requesting information or penalizing those who donât adequately report it.
âThere is no feedback from the Administrative Office concerning errors or omissions on the submitted forms. Without feedback, there is no accountability, and the errors and omissions are likely to persist,â the study said.
Watchdogs who have scrutinized the Wiretap Report over the years have repeatedly raised concerns that some jurisdictions simply do not disclose their wiretaps, even when legally required to do so.
They werenât doing any wiretaps in Dallas? I mean, come on.
Stephen Wm. Smith, retired federal magistrate judge
Smith, for example, found that many major cities had fewer wiretaps reported than small communities. He also found some of them just didnât report at all.
âThey werenât doing any wiretaps in Dallas? I mean, come on,â he said. He recommended that the Administrative Office call out the cities and states that were failing to report each year.
The study also noted that many participants werenât aware that the Administrative Office doesnât have enforcement capabilities.
âLearning about the states that absolutely refused to report, that was new to us,â Gidari said. âIt never occurred to me that the AO didnât have the ability to pick up the phone and call a recalcitrant prosecutor and the chief judge of the district and say, âYouâre not reporting. This is a law.â â
Because of this lack of enforcement capabilities, participants in the study recommend that Congress take action, calling for legislative changes that would give the Administrative Office enforcement powers or the ability to impose penalties for failure to report.
âThe more Congress becomes aware of this, the more likely it is that something will happen,â Smith said.
Written by: Alfred Ng
Also published here