Back in December, I posted a blog recounting a truly
bizarre experience: sitting in on what I thought would be an open court
hearing, and instead witnessing the closing off of the judicial process to the
public. We had gone to court to argue our motion to quash a Suffolk county district attorney subpoena to Twitter,
seeking information about our client, John Doe, and information related to
Occupy Boston.
Yesterday there was another hearing, but this time I
got to hear everything. The case was at the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk
County, with Justice Francis X. Spina presiding. An Assistant District Attorney
for Suffolk County argued for the Commonwealth; ACLU of Massachusetts staff
attorney Laura Rótolo argued for the First Amendment and our client, John Doe.
(I’m leaving out what exactly the hearing today revolved around, simply because
the prior court’s judgment, as well as all of the briefs related to the case,
remain sealed. I’m therefore not allowed to talk about it, still. Although since
yesterday’s hearing was held in open court, and I’m allowed to tell you
everything I heard there, you’ll likely get an accurate sense of where things
stand with the case simply by reading the following.)
The case: what ground are you standing on?
The argument focused on the most basic of questions:
does “@p0isAn0n” have the right to challenge the D.A.’s subpoena? Does he even
get to go to court and say that the subpoena is unconstitutional?
Attorney Rótolo opened by arguing that yes, contrary
to the state’s assertion, our client does indeed have standing to challenge the
subpoena to Twitter for his records. There are First Amendment issues at stake
in this case, Rótolo argued, because if our motion fails and Twitter is
forced to comply with the subpoena, the state will learn of our client’s
identity, thereby ridding him of the opportunity to speak anonymously. Once
our client’s anonymity is lost, it is lost forever. Further, John Doe is the
only person who can bring a motion to quash the subpoena before the court. Twitter
has no interest in doing so and will not do so; faced with this reality, our
client has no other options but to defend himself.
When First Amendment issues are at stake, the person
whose personally identifiable information is sought via the administrative
subpoena process must have a right to challenge it, otherwise we all lose our
rights to anonymity online. We are in big trouble if we cannot criticize the
government anonymously on the internet.
The court should take into account how our society
has rapidly become an internet society; it is here, where you are reading
this right now, where our voices are heard and where issues of the day are
debated. As many erudite scholars and activists have demonstrated at length,
anonymity is vital to speech. Without the cloak of anonymity, many of the
most important critiques will be silenced because people rightly fear
retribution by the government. Online speech is no different.
The Assistant District Attorney spoke next. She said
some pretty astounding things, including that our client – and therefore, the
rest of us – has no right to anonymous speech on Twitter. She said that the
administrative subpoena in question is “very similar to a Grand Jury subpoena,”
and that the Massachusetts state legislature authorized prosecutors to use it
as an investigative tool. She argued that the process can remain opaque and can
proceed without interference from the subject because, like the exemption under
public records law preventing open access to materials that would reveal
investigatory procedures, the administrative subpoena is an authorized
investigatory tool and therefore above reproach or legal challenge.
Finally, she argued that because the subpoena did not
ask for any content information, but only IP and other identifying information,
our client has no right to use a First Amendment defense. It’s not what he
said, but who he is, that they are after, she suggested.
Judge Spina reflected for a moment, and then restated
our claim that the First Amendment “chill” here relates to the stripping of our
client’s anonymity, which is unrelated to the content of his tweets. The ADA
told him that our client gave up his right to anonymity online when he joined
Twitter, leading the judge to ask our lawyers about Twitter’s Terms of
Service agreement. Does signing up to use Twitter mean that people forfeit
their rights to anonymity, if that’s what the policy says?
“No,” Rótolo told him.
Judge Spina: Does Twitter use then grant people the
right to anonymously make threats?
Rótolo: “No. And in this case, our client is not
responsible for making any threats whatsoever. The issue at stake here was the
compiling of publicly available information from the internet, something anyone
could have done, which is not illegal and does not constitute a threat.”
Furthermore, she argued, when there is a First
Amendment issue at stake, as there is with the unmasking of our client in this
case, the burden falls on the state to prove that they have compelling interest
in his identity. Since he has not committed any crime, we present to the court
that they do not have compelling interest that would justify stripping him of
his First Amendment right to anonymous speech critical of the government, she
said.
And that’s when things got really interesting.
The government attorney had some pretty shocking
things to say about anonymous speech and our client’s rights. Among them: the “voluntary
nature of the tweeting” is what “puts his IP address out there.” No one
forced him to use Twitter, she argued, and therefore his personally
identifiable information is fair game for the government to scoop up.
The judge countered, asking her how he might engage
in anonymous speech in the 21st century if not online. Shockingly, she said, “he
could have gone down to Dewey square and handed out flyers.” But he would
not be anonymous if he did that, Judge Spina said. People will see him handing
out those flyers. (Ed note: so will the literally tens of surveillance cameras pointed at the square.)
“He can wear a ski mask,” the D.A. said,
prompting at least one snicker from the public. “When he contracts through
Twitter” to speak publicly, “he gives up” his rights to anonymity, she said.
So there you have it. All you people who use the
internet out there, know this: the government advises that if you want your
speech to remain anonymous, you put on a mask and head down to the most
politically surveilled region in your city to pass out controversial
anti-government material that angers the police. But don’t say anything on
Twitter, or the government can find you, and you won’t have the right to step
into a courtroom and say, “that’s not right.”
Stay tuned for more on this case, coming as soon as
we hear from Judge Spina. Let’s hope he realizes what most of us have long
known: when we click a box next to Terms of Service agreements in order to be
able to engage in the 21st century world of ideas, we aren’t consenting to
giving away our Constitutional rights.
Let’s hope Judge Spina agrees.
Note: this issue is centrally related to the
discussion around third party content holders, which Justice Sotomayor brought up in her concurring opinion
in the recently decided Jones case on GPS tracking. Let's hope the Supreme
Court goes in the right direction with respect to third party content and
Constitutional guarantees. Nothing less than free speech on the internet is at
stake.
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