News: VT police attempt a warrantless library computer search

A Vermont librarian risked arrest for insisting on a search warrant when police demanded access to a library open Internet terminal in late June. See AP story today: Library Confrontation Points Up Privacy Dilemma, which is on news websites throughout the nation. The police just assumed they could take the computer without a search warrant.

Children’s librarian Judith Flint was getting ready for the monthly book discussion group for 8- and 9-year-olds on “Love That Dog” when police showed up.

They weren’t kidding around: Five state police detectives wanted to seize Kimball Public Library’s public access computers as they frantically searched for a 12-year-old girl, acting on a tip that she sometimes used the terminals.

Flint demanded a search warrant, touching off a confrontation that pitted the privacy rights of library patrons against the rights of police on official business.

“It’s one of the most difficult situations a library can face,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, deputy director of intellectual freedom issues for the American Library Association.

Investigators did obtain a warrant about eight hours later, but the June 26 standoff in the 105-year-old, red brick library on Main Street frustrated police and had fellow librarians cheering Flint.

Before this search even took place, Vermont librarians were already big into privacy.

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