Federal Judge Orders Woman to Unlock iPhone Using Her Fingerprint
Federal Judge Orders Woman to Unlock iPhone Using Her
Fingerprint
By ALYSSA NEWCOMB
May 2, 2016, 1:41 PM ET
The case of a California woman who was ordered to unlock
an iPhone using her fingerprint is raising questions about whether compelling a
person to unlock their smartphone could infringe on their right against
self-incrimination.
A warrant was issued in February ordering Paytsar
Bkhchadzhyan to unlock an iPhone seized from a Glendale, California, residence.
She later pleaded no contest to a felony count of identity theft, according to
the Los Angeles Times.
While much of the public discussion over encryption has
focused on four to six digit passcodes, the California case is raising the
question of whether a person's biometric markers -- such as a fingerprint or
iris -- could be used to help authorities crack into a device.
Mark Bartholomew, a law professor at the University of
Buffalo who studies encryption and cyber law, told ABC News "the law is
very uncertain on this because it hasn't caught up to technology."
At issue is whether pressing a finger to unlock a phone
and giving law enforcement access to all of its contents is tantamount to
testifying without ever speaking a word.
"It's one of those things like always technology is
way ahead of the law," Bartholomew said. "These issues of passwords,
biometric safeguards, at the same time law enforcement wants them, over time
these are going to be teed up for the courts and Supreme Court to weigh in on
it."
But Albert Gidari, the director of privacy at Stanford
Law School's Center for Internet and Society, told the LA Times that the action
might not violate the 5th Amendment prohibition of self-incrimination.
"Unlike disclosing passcodes, you are not compelled
to speak or say what's 'in your mind' to law enforcement," Gidari told the
LA Times. "'Put your finger here' is not testimonial or
self-incriminating."
Apple first added Touch ID to the iPhone 5s and has since
included the security measure in all of its recent iPhones and iPads. Built
into the home button, Touch ID can also be bypassed using passcodes.
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