T-Mobile documents we received from Irvine, Calif. demonstrate that law enforcement is not just asking for voicemail password resets in emergencies, but also in investigations, and that Verizon is not the only provider capable of handling such requests. The documents show that T-Mobile offers several options to officers interested in voicemail:
The Voicemail PIN Reset.
T-Mobile notes that “once changed, the PIN cannot be reset to the
original PIN . . . Be aware that this action will potentially alert the
subscriber to activity on his voicemail account.”
Copying of existing messages to a separate account.
“A dial-in number and PIN for the separate account will be provided to
law enforcement, and law enforcement may review, save, or delete any
message in that account without the subscriber's knowledge.” This
technique has its downside for investigators, too—moved voicemails are
date/time-stamped with the date/time they were moved, not with the
date/time they were received, decreasing their evidentiary value.
T-Mobile will provide access to this information not only with a warrant
but also with a lesser court order (the manual does not specify what
kind). That means law enforcement might be able to access your voicemail
on less than a probable cause standard. (We don’t know what other carriers’ policies are on this.)
Voicemail “cloning.”
This involves “duplicating each incoming voice message left for the
targeted subscriber. A twin message is simultaneously deposited in a
special mailbox assigned to the designated investigating agency.” This
provides real-time access to voicemail, ensures that date/time-stamps
are recorded accurately, and does not alert the subscriber to the
monitoring. Unlike with access to existing messages, T-Mobile requires
law enforcement to obtain a wiretap order in order to get one of these cloned mailboxes.
Other techniques for accessing a subscriber’s phone account are also
available to law enforcement. According to a Qwest document we received
from Omaha, Neb.,
the company’s Emergency Response Center can, in emergency situations,
limit a phone line to incoming calls only and can also change the
subscriber's telephone number.If all this makes you nostalgic for a good, old-fashioned landline, think again. Verizon has the ability to:
Change the number for a landline too and give the new number only to law enforcement.
Set
an account so that if someone picks up a landline to call out, it
automatically dials a designated law enforcement number—and no one else.
Prevent
all outgoing calls or do various things to force a number out of
service—from straight-up interrupting a call to sending a 3-decibel
sound on the phone line to irritate the caller so he/she hangs up.
Apparently Verizon will do these techniques for any law enforcement
agent who provides the phone number and address for the target phone and
his or her own name, dispatch number, and contact information. There is
no court oversight over these functions.The vast majority of law enforcement agents are good public servants who want to do the right thing and keep us safe, but our history is strewn with examples of individual law enforcement agents—and sometimes entire law enforcement agencies—who abused their power to the detriment of individuals’ liberty. It is for that reason that, as technology gets smarter and smarter, we need to make sure that legal protections keep pace.
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