WSJ: Sealed Court Files Obscure Rise in Electronic Surveillance

WSJ: Sealed Court Files Obscure Rise in Electronic Surveillance by Jennifer Valentino-DeVries:

Data obtained by The Wall Street Journal from the Justice Department and various federal district courts suggest that electronic-surveillance orders have increased over the past decade and that the vast majority remain sealed.

WSJ: How the Journal Evaluated Sealed Surveillance Orders by Jennifer Valentino-DeVries and Andrea Fuller:

Criminal-court orders for electronic surveillance have surged over the past decade. To quantify their rise and assess the routine sealing of such records—the subject of a Page One story in The Wall Street Journal—the Journal contacted the 25 busiest federal-court districts based on the number of criminal cases in 2013.

Six districts made public some type of electronic-surveillance information or disclosed it after a Journal request. Officials in 19 districts said even basic information about the number of such requests wasn’t public.

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