Indiana Supreme Court rules that police can't compel people to unlock iPhones

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The Indiana Supreme Court issued a strong opinion Tuesday that refusing to unlock a smartphone for authorities is constitutionally protected.

The Indiana Supreme Court ruled that refusing to unlock a device is constitutionally protected.
The Indiana Supreme Court ruled that refusing to unlock a device is constitutionally protected.


Amid a broader ongoing conversation about Apple and encryption, there have been sporadic cases of people refusing to unlock their iPhones for authorities. Privacy advocates believe that declining to give up a smartphone passcode is protected by the Fifth Amendment.

In this specific case, a Carmel, Indiana woman refused to unlock her iPhone 7 Plus for detectives in an investigation. When she did, the trial court held her in contempt. On Tuesday, the Indiana Supreme Court reversed that ruling.

"By unlocking her smartphone, Seo would provide law enforcement with information it does not already know, which the state could then use in its prosecution against her," the court said. "The Fifth Amendment's protection from compelled self-incrimination prohibits this result."

Digital rights groups the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) argued in oral arguments in the case, Katelin Seo v. State of Indiana, and also announced the court decision.

Seo had reported to Indiana law enforcement that she had been the victim of a rape. But when she met with detectives and provided forensic evidence from her iPhone, investigators switched their attention to her.

Detectives believed that Seo was harassing her alleged rapist with spoofed calls and texts. They placed her under arrest and took possession of her iPhone. When they asked her to unlock it, she refused.

While the trial court held Seo in contempt, an appeals court reversed that decision. The Supreme Court's Tuesday ruling could have wider implications for law enforcement.

Although federal authorities largely have the ability to unlock iPhones, local police departments may not. In some cases, police have jailed people who refused to unlock their devices. Instead of overarching protections against compelled decryption, however, there's only a patchwork of court decisions like the one in Indiana. The state joins Pennsylvania, and the EFF is currently tracking similar cases in Oregon and New Jersey.

In Seo, the court noted that smartphones contain "far more private information than a personal diary or an individual tax return ever could."

Taking into account forensic tools and iPhone cracking devices, the court said that compelling a user to decrypt their iPhones would "tip the scales too far in the State's favor, resulting in a seismic erosion of the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination."

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 6
    bluefire1bluefire1 Posts: 1,302member
    Thankfully the Fifth amendment protection against self-incrimination was reinforced by this ruling. Kudos to the Indiana Supreme Court, and to Tim Cook for standing strong on the encryption issue/personal liberties.
    edited June 2020 darkvaderDeelron
  • Reply 2 of 6
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Sometimes good things happen.
  • Reply 3 of 6
    davgregdavgreg Posts: 1,037member
    And the Indiana Supreme Court is one of the more conservative in the US.
    caladanian
  • Reply 4 of 6
    mariowincomariowinco Posts: 112member
    Not so sure on why for a lot of Americans is ok all this protection for (potential) law offenders. Does the iPhone contain data that’s ok to make you free? Use it. Is the contrary: oh my! As simple as that, at least from my Europe centric POV. 
  • Reply 5 of 6
    EsquireCatsEsquireCats Posts: 1,268member
    Not so sure on why for a lot of Americans is ok all this protection for (potential) law offenders. Does the iPhone contain data that’s ok to make you free? Use it. Is the contrary: oh my! As simple as that, at least from my Europe centric POV. 
    The "Nothing to hide" argument has been extensively discussed and debunked. Such an idea is so basic, so elementary that the "Right to privacy" is widely held in the majority of legal systems world wide.
    AirunJaefastasleep
  • Reply 6 of 6
    Not so sure on why for a lot of Americans is ok all this protection for (potential) law offenders. Does the iPhone contain data that’s ok to make you free? Use it. Is the contrary: oh my! As simple as that, at least from my Europe centric POV. 
    Just because I have nothing to hide doesn't mean I have something for you to see.
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