Apple served with warrant for Texas shooter’s iCloud data
Texas Rangers have served Apple with a search warrant
for data from deceased Sutherland Springs gunman Devin Patrick Kelley,
who killed 26 people in a Texas church earlier this month.
The San Antonio Express-News reports
that the warrant covers files stored in Kelley’s iCloud account, with
law enforcement apparently seeking phone call and message information,
photos and videos, and other data dating back to January 1st, 2016.
Another warrant allows law enforcement to look for this data
independently on an iPhone SE found near Kelley’s body. (A separate
warrant covers data on a second device, which court records identify as
an LG feature phone.) The warrants were obtained on November 9th, two
days after the FBI complained that encryption had prevented it from accessing the shooter’s phone.
Apple’s policies state that it will share iCloud data
with law enforcement agencies if there’s a valid warrant. Depending on
how frequently Kelley created backups using iCloud, there may be
additional information on the phone itself, but Apple has refused past
requests to directly access devices — the company went to court last year to avoid unlocking a phone belonging to San Bernardino shooter Syed Farook, until the FBI successfully hacked the phone without its help, rendering the case moot.
The FBI has used the Sutherland Springs shooting to argue
that strong encryption is hurting law enforcement’s ability to
investigate crimes, saying it was “working very hard to get into the
phone.” Later reports indicated
that it did not reach out to Apple within a 48-hour period during which
Kelley’s fingerprint might have unlocked the phone via Touch ID.
Apple declined to comment on pending law enforcement
matters, including whether it had provided iCloud data to the Texas
Rangers. However, a spokesperson said that the company had not received
any law enforcement agency request for technical help (like unlocking)
related to Kelley’s phone.
The Article was Published on : TheVerge
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