Lawfare: The FBI Impersonates the Media: Some of the Rules Governing Cyber-Subterfuge

Lawfare: The FBI Impersonates the Media: Some of the Rules Governing Cyber-Subterfuge by Andy Wang:

The developing story of the FBI’s impersonation of journalists is, in a way, really the story of Timberline high school in Washington State. In June of 2007 Timberline had received a series of bomb threats, prompting a week of evacuations. The FBI and local law enforcement traced the problem to an anonymous account on the MySpace social media site. But the trail seemed to stop there, as investigators were unable to ascertain the identity of the person or persons behind the account.

. . .

Given these fierce reactions to the Timberline episode, an important question has again been raised: What rules apply to this sort of law enforcement trickery? Below, I overview two potentially relevant constraints: policies employed within the FBI itself, as well as Fourth Amendment limits set by courts. (To be clear, I do not mean to canvass every legal issue raised by the episode.)

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