http://kernelmag.dailydot.com/issue-sections/staff-editorials/13910/sox-browser-history-obstruction-justice/
Deleting your browser history could land you in prison

By S.E. Smith on August 9th, 2015



The absence of evidence shouldn’t be viewed as proof of guilt, but tell
that to the U.S. federal court—where Khairullozhon Matanov received a
30-month sentence in mid-June, in part for deleting his browser history
<http://www.cbc.ca/news/trending/clearing-your-browser-history-can-be-deemed-obstruction-of-justice-in-the-u-s-1.3105222>.
Though he wasn’t an accomplice in the Boston bombing,
<http://www.dailydot.com/tags/boston-bombing/> the FBI
<http://www.dailydot.com/tags/fbi/> charged that the friend of the Tsarnaev
brothers with obstructing justice by destroying evidence in the case. That
evidence includes now-deleted entries in his browser history, along with
certain videos.

Matanov isn’t the first person to be sentenced under such circumstances.
This is a disturbing trend when it comes to how the federal government
views the Internet <http://www.dailydot.com/tags/internet/> and information
technology.

Instead of being a resource for readily available information that citizens
can access at will, the Internet is becoming a tool for spying
<http://www.dailydot.com/tags/spying/> on citizens and residents of the
United States. People no longer enjoy the explicit right to privacy that
would protect them from warrantless wiretapping and seizure of Internet
records. As Matanov’s case illustrates, they’re also not entitled to the
legal protection of being allowed to have control over their own browser
history and private records.

In an interview with the *Nation, *the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s
Hanni Fakhoury observed
<http://www.thenation.com/article/you-can-be-prosecuted-clearing-your-browser-history/>:
“The idea that you have to create a record of where you’ve gone or open all
your cupboards all the time and leave your front door unlocked and
available for law enforcement inspection at any time is not the country we
have established for ourselves more than 200 years ago.”

However, that’s precisely what’s happening in this case.

He was charged, as others have been in similar cases
<https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20150606/16191831259/according-to-government-clearing-your-browser-history-is-felony.shtml>,
under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act <http://www.sec.gov/about/laws.shtml>. SOX, as
it’s known, was a direct response to the corporate abuses of firms like
Enron, which destroyed untold accounting records and documentation to avoid
culpability for federal crimes. Under the law, people are required to
preserve any evidence they knowingly believe could be used in future
investigations, even if no such investigation has been launched.

This is where Matanov ran into trouble. After the bombing, still not
knowing who was responsible, he met up with the Tsarnaev brothers for
dinner. His roommate testified that Matanov expressed some troubling
beliefs about the bombing at some point after this meeting—including the
belief that it might have been justified under his personal interpretation
of Islam <http://www.dailydot.com/tags/islam/>. It took Matanov several
days to learn who was involved. Clearly suspecting that the situation was
about to get ugly, and likely in a panic, he doctored his browser history just
days after the bombing
<https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2014/05/30/timeline-alleged-activities-khairullozhon-matanov/sF4n3bB6HDWGgeUWzeTyhN/story.html>
and deleted videos that betrayed his relationship with the two brothers and
the type of material they liked to watch together in social settings, which
often included violent and disturbing videos.

Without SOX, this would have been a personal matter, but under the law,
prosecutors argued that he made a conscious choice to destroy materials he
knew could be used in a future investigation.

This series of events explains how Matanov found himself pleading guilty to
four charges of obstruction of justice on advice from his attorneys, for
which he faced up to 20 years in prison. The case further backs up an
extremely disturbing existing precedent: Under SOX, it could theoretically
be argued that no one’s browser history is private, which is clearly absurd.

There are numerous entirely legitimate reasons to turn private browsing on
or opt to clear history. For example, many people prefer to research
medical problems privately to protect their privacy. Young people looking
for sexual health resources often clear their history to avoid attracting
attention from their parents, as do those looking for help with sexual or
physical abuse. A partner buying a present for someone might want to avoid
ruining the surprise.

Enumerating reasons for the legitimate usage of private browsing or deleted
records, however, is beside the point: Privacy
<http://www.dailydot.com/tags/privacy/> is a fundamental right in the
United States, and people don’t need to justify how they use their
computers. If instructed to preserve anything that could be considered
evidence in a federal investigation, people are effectively backed into a
corner, guilty until proven innocent. Individuals are not evidence
preservation specialists, and they shouldn’t be held responsible for
clinging to every possible scrap of data that might someday be useful in
federal cases.

If a friend is murdered and authorities determine the case is federal in
scope, are past emails potential evidence into the investigation of her
death? Do you know where the letters you traded with her in college are? Is
correspondence with your personal accountant suddenly evidence, if she’s
indicted in a federal case that has nothing to do with your business
interactions?

In cases where electronic evidence relevant to a case is destroyed, there
are already precedents for charging people with destruction of evidence or
evidence tampering. There’s no need to abuse SOX to browbeat people into
pleading guilty on federal charges.

In fact, the Daily Beast’s Susan Zalkind argues
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/26/the-fbi-is-trying-to-destroy-my-life.html>
that there are some very good reasons to avoid doing exactly what the FBI
did in this case.

Pressing charges against people who come forward may cost lives, too.
Michael German, a former FBI agent and terrorism specialist now with the
Brennan Center for Justice, says the repercussions of overzealous
prosecution can be damning to national-security efforts.

The U.S. government has already demonstrated a somewhat unhealthy interest
in the private business of its people, turning American soil into something
resembling *From Russia With Love. *With repeated violations of privacy
rights
<http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2014/01/17/nsa_surveillance_reform_every_scary_weird_thing_we_know_the_agency_can_do.html>,
the government has confiscated phone records and other private materials in
highly dubious and possibly illegal circumstances, and it’s freely
wiretapped and spied on citizens. While Americans may not be actually
living under the modern-day equivalent of the KGB, this is hardly a nation
that trusts its citizens.

This has increasingly been the case after Sept. 11, 2001. Congress passed
the Patriot Act <http://www.dailydot.com/tags/patriot-act/> the next month
on the grounds that the nation needed to protect its populace from further
terrorist attacks. Fourteen years later and under the auspices of President
Obama—a president who has significantly contributed to the security
state—Congress has just reaffirmed the principles of the Patriot Act,
though some clauses were allowed to expire. Notably, the NSA
<http://www.dailydot.com/tags/nsa/> will no longer be permitted to collect
phone data at will, instead relying on phone companies to turn over their
records, which may come as cold comfort to some Americans.

Despite repeated outcry from individuals, organizations committed to
privacy, and even some government actors
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/meet-executive-order-12333-the-reagan-rule-that-lets-the-nsa-spy-on-americans/2014/07/18/93d2ac22-0b93-11e4-b8e5-d0de80767fc2_story.html>,
the government as a whole views its citizens as enemies, and cases like
this are a striking example of the consequences. SOX was designed to bring
down corporate wrongdoers, and instead it’s being used to target
individuals—while corporations that brought the nation to its financial
knees in 2008 are still not being held fully accountable.

Troublingly, alongside the government abuses of privacy comes the fact that
the feds cannot necessarily be trusted with private data. This was
illustrated in early June
<http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/06/why-the-biggest-government-hack-ever-got-past-opm-dhs-and-nsa/>,
when
the federal government finally admitted that the Office of Personnel
Management had been the victim of a sustained electronic attack, and it had
no idea how long the breach had been occurring. Some 22 million federal
employees were affected by the breach
<http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2015/06/05/huge-government-data-breach-inexcusable-experts-say/>,
one that could have been prevented through basic security measures the
government failed to deploy. The Internal Revenue Service discovered an ongoing
extensive breach
<http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/irs-says-thieves-stole-tax-info-100-000-taxpayers-n364926>
the
previous month, and in 2014, there were at least 10 major hacks
<http://www.nextgov.com/cybersecurity/2014/12/year-breach-10-federal-agency-data-breaches-2014/102066/>
to
federal agencies’ systems.

The argument under this new enforcement of SOX is that people who have
nothing to hide shouldn’t be concerned about showing the government what
they have. This isn’t considered a convincing argument in many legal
settings—for example, when police officers pull over a driver, and the
driver refuses a search on the grounds of personal privacy—but for some
reason, the reasoning is becoming par for the course when it comes to
electronic searches. This is a dangerous and unacceptable breach of
American freedom and tradition.

Even the government has to grudgingly admit that Matanov didn’t really
commit any crime, despite the fact that the FBI stalked him for over a
year. Spending time with people who do terrible things and endorsing
hateful views doesn’t make one a criminal, especially given that he met
with police as soon as he understood the scope of the bombing to disclose
his relationship to the Tsarnaevs. However, he was still punished simply
for having viewed—and later hiding—some questionable content on the
Internet, a prospect that all of us should find chilling.

If people are too afraid to use the Internet, or browsers start coming with
a governor that makes it impossible to clear their caches for any reason,
the terrorists really will have won.

*S. E. Smith is a writer, editor, and agitator with regular appearances in
the *Guardian* and Salon, along with several anthologies. Smith also serves
as the social justice editor for xoJane and will be co-chairing WisCon
40—the preeminent feminist science-fiction conference—in 2016. A version of
this story was originally published
<http://www.dailydot.com/opinion/browser-history-obstruction-justice/> by
the Daily Dot on June 10, 2015. *

*Illustration by Tiffany Pai*





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