TechDirt: 2009 DHS Document Says Border Patrol Can Search/Copy The Contents Of Your Device Just Because It Wants To

TechDirt: 2009 DHS Document Says Border Patrol Can Search/Copy The Contents Of Your Device Just Because It Wants To by Tim Cushing:

FOIA clearinghouse MuckRock has scored another revealing document, this time from Customs and Border Protection. As we’re well aware, the US border isn’t technically considered to be part of the United States, at least not as far as the Constitution is concerned. All bets are off, 4th (and others) Amendment-wise. If you’re traveling with anything — whether its a vehicle, suitcase or laptop — expect it to be searched.

What MuckRock has obtained is the DHS’s Privacy Impact Assessment of the CBP’s search policies. The only thing seen of this near-mythical document to this point has been a two-page summary of the report’s contents, released nearly three years after its border search policy went into effect.The assessment basically says privacy will be severely impacted… and not much else. To do otherwise is to open the borders to terrorists, illegal immigrants, drug runners, child porn traffickers… at least according to the talking points. If you’re none of the above, you’re not exempt from in-depth warrantless searches of your person and belongings, including laptops and other electronic devices.

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