The IRS Doesn’t Think “Reasonable Expectation of Privacy” Applies to Your Emails
Posted Wednesday, April 10,
2013, at 5:59 PM
The IRS Criminal Tax Division doesn't think the Fourth Amendment should apply
to email
Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images
Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images
With Tax Day less than a week away
in the United States, you probably don’t need another reason to dislike the IRS.
But here’s one anyway: Newly released documents show that in recent years, the agency
has claimed American Internet users “do not have a reasonable expectation of
privacy” when it comes to their emails being snooped on.
The documents, obtained by the ACLU under the Freedom of Information Act and
published today, reveal that in 2009, the Criminal Tax Division at the IRS
claimed in an internal handbook that in general “the Fourth Amendment does not
protect communications held in electronic storage, such as email messages stored
on a server.” This claim may have been rooted in a reading of a controversial
loophole contained in the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which enables
agencies to obtain email older than 180 days without a search warrant.
In 2010, a significant appeals
court judgment held in United States v. Warshak that email was
protected by the Fourth Amendment, and that government agents should obtain a
probable cause warrant from a court before compelling email providers to hand
over users’ messages—regardless of whether they had been stored on a server for
more than 180 days. This is the highest legal standard, requiring authorities to
show there is “reasonable basis” for believing the search will yield evidence of
a crime.
But despite that ruling, ECPA’s
requirements have been “inconsistent, confusing, and uncertain,” as Richard
Salgado, Google’s legal director of law enforcement and information security, has put it. IRS emails obtained by the ACLU demonstrate this,
as they suggest that that the IRS avoided having to always obtain a warrant by
continuing to exploit the ECPA loophole. The loophole enables authorities to get
their hands on emails older than 180 days with an administrative subpoena—which
requires merely showing that the information sought is “relevant” to an ongoing
investigation. A special counsel for the IRS in one email exchange seems dismissive of the Warshak
ruling, stating that “I have not heard anything related to this opinion. We have
always taken the position that a warrant is necessary when retrieving e-mails
that are less than 180 days old”—implying that emails more
than 180 days old can still be obtained by other, easier means. (It’s possible
that other agencies have adopted a similar position, given the confusion over
ECPA. The ACLU says it has lodged FOIA requests with the FBI and other
components of the Justice Department to find out.)
Last month, lawmakers proposed
new legislation that aims to update ECPA by scrapping the contentious
180-days clause. Even the Justice Department—which rarely takes the same side as
civil liberties advocates—is backing the change: In March, a DOJ representative
admitted to the House judiciary committee that there is “no principled basis to
treat email less than 180 days old differently than email more than 180 days
old.” This marked a stark reversal for the DOJ, which had previously been aggressively opposed to privacy-enhancing reforms of
ECPA.
The ACLU is criticizing the IRS for its lack of clarity on the issue and
demanding that the agency “let the American public know whether it obtains
warrants across the board when accessing people’s email.” The rights group is
also calling on the IRS to “formally amend its policies to require its agents to
obtain warrants when seeking the contents of emails, without regard to their
age.”
It’s worth noting, though, that
not all providers will play along if the IRS is still attempting to obtain
emails without a warrant. Earlier this year, in a move lauded by privacy groups,
Google said that it is effectively ignoring the 180-days ECPA
loophole by always requiring a search warrant from authorities seeking to obtain
user content stored using its Gmail, Google Drive, or other services. It is
unclear whether other providers—such as Microsoft and Yahoo—have similar
policies.
The IRS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. I’ll update
this post as and when I receive anything.
Update, April 11, 6:11 p.m.: The IRS has issued the
below statement:
Respecting taxpayer rights and taxpayer privacy are cornerstone principles for the IRS. Our job is to administer the nation's tax laws, and we do so in a way that follows the law and treats taxpayers with respect.
Contrary to some suggestions, the IRS does not use emails to target taxpayers. Any suggestion to the contrary is wrong.
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