EFF Files Brief In Support Of 'Cannibal Cop' To Keep The CFAA From Becoming Even MORE Abusive

from the strangest-of-bedfellows dept

The US legal system took a step towards criminalizing thought when a New York court convicted a former NYPD officer of conspiring to kidnap, rape, kill and eat 100 women. The evidence against Gilberto Valle included chat logs and internet searches.

The details uncovered were nightmarish. But at the end of it all, it only amounted to Valle giving his very vivid imagination a long leash. On appeal, the court overturned the conspiracy charges, stating that Valle’s “conspiracy” was little more than thoughtcrime, something the legal system isn’t* in the business of punishing. (And yet, “conspiracy” remains a valid criminal charge — one used extensively by the FBI to bag its handcrafted “terrorists.” Go figure.)

*About a million caveats apply.

But the court left one charge on the table: a CFAA violation. During the course of Valle’s fantasizing, he used police databases to look up information on one of his “victims.” This, of course, is an egregious abuse of his position and access, but it is not — as the EFF argues — a CFAA violation.

Despite acquitting Valle on the conspiracy charge, the court upheld the CFAA conviction, believing that the restrictions placed on Valle concerning the database—which permitted him to access any part of the database as long as it was for a valid law enforcement purpose—was an access restriction, not a use restriction, simply because of the way the restriction was phrased. The distinction between “access” and “use” restrictions is critical because serious prison time is at stake. Congress clearly intended the CFAA to criminalize the act of breaking into computer systems a person is not allowed to be in otherwise, but violating a use restriction—a (usually written) policy that governs the purposes for which someone can use their access—is clearly not that.

The EFF has filed an amicus brief in Valle’s case (now before the Second Circuit Court), arguing for this charge to be overturned as well. In it, the EFF points out that Valle’s unauthorized access didn’t involve him actually breaking into the NYPD’s computers — a key element of CFAA charges. Instead, he already had access. He just didn’t have permission to do what he did.

So, while Valle’s abuse of his access was certainly immoral, possibly illegal under a New York state law, and a clear violation of NYPD policy, it was not the sort of circumvention Congress had in mind when it crafted the bill. There should definitely be consequences for this activity (including Valle being subject to civil rights lawsuits from the violated party[ies]), but there definitely should not be a finding that violating an internal use policy is a federal crime.

As it stands now, the decision reached by the lower court poses a serious threat to nearly anyone with access to computers/networks provided by their employers.

Most critically, the court set a dangerous precedent. As we’ve repeatedly warned, this theory of CFAA liability gives employers and website owners the power to make behavior illegal through simply adopting use restrictions in their corporate policies or terms of use, which in turn criminalizes a broad range of innocuous everyday behaviors—like checking personal email or the score of a baseball game.

It’s the worst cases — ones with less-than-sympathetic defendants — that result in the worst precedents. Valle’s extended, detailed cannibalistic fantasies are hard to defend, even knowing that he never followed through with the lurid plans he dreamed up. Free speech is toughest to defend when it’s composed of brutal and depraved fantasies that include any number of hideous criminal acts. But the lower court saw it for what it was: thoughts, not deeds.

Now, there’s one detail left, but it’s hardly a minor one. The remaining charge — if left standing — seriously lowers the bar for criminal charges under the CFAA, a law that is already severely flawed. And so, the EFF joins the battle on behalf of a former NYPD officer who abused his position to further his violent fantasies in hopes of protecting far-more-centered members of the general public from abuse at the hands of a broken law.

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Comments on “EFF Files Brief In Support Of 'Cannibal Cop' To Keep The CFAA From Becoming Even MORE Abusive”

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16 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Unfortunately, as the article states, it also sets a precedent for considering any action performed on a computer against an employers policy to be a federal crime. Looking at person email using your work computer? A quick trip to lolcats during lunch? Looks like a CFAA violation….

I don’t think so.

Anonymous Coward says:

this is the problem when a society has fallen as far as the USA has and wants to prosecute everyone for doing anything, rather than using common sense in a lot of cases to actually convict someone of doing wrong. and remember the entertainment industries are really big on getting as much punishment as possible for people who have done virtually nothing apart from piss off the studio heads!

Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: Common sense...

…is not a good measure for whether or not someone did something wrong because it’s inconsistent from person to person. Choose five people and you’ll get six opinions of what is the common sense thing to do.

We have to delineate these issues to the point that even an idiot judge can determine clearly what specific wrong was committed by whom. Because otherwise judges will be idiots when trying to connect the dots.

Nom says:

Re: What is 'conspiracy'?

What? Never heard of a conspiracy of one?

So long as the person thinks there is a someone else in on the plan, then they can “conspire” with that them. Even if that second person is really an FBI agent tasked with constructing the whole scenario.

You don’t actually need to be part of a conspiracy to be charged, you just need to think you are.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: What is 'conspiracy'?

Easy mistake to make, see ‘Conspiracy’ in legal terms doesn’t mean what it does in ‘everyday’ use. When a court uses it, it’s basically ‘We know the defendant hasn’t actually committed any crime, but since we’re here anyway, we’ll just charge him with thinking about committing a crime’.

It’s one of those charges they throw out when you haven’t actually committed a crime, but they want to make your life miserable anyway and/or force you into a plea deal.

Uriel-238 (profile) says:

Re: The responsibility of a justice system...

Includes making sure that bad people are punished for their specific crimes, and for fitting the penalty to those crimes.

For example, we didn’t have specific laws to convict Al Capone for running an organized institution of racketeering, so we not only got him for tax evasion, but went on to creatively tinker the statute of limitations of tax evasion to convict him. So yes, we got a criminal behind bars, but at the expense of a precedent that the state can put someone behind bars for stupid interpretations of stupid laws if someone in the state thinks you’re evil.

Not a good thing when some judges, cops and representatives think that ordinary schlubs are evil.

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