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When tweets can make you a jailbird

2010-03-17 11:04:16

By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press Writer Richard Lardner, Associated Press

Writer Tue Mar 16, 11:29 pm ET

WASHINGTON Maxi Sopo was having so much fun "living in paradise" in Mexico

that he posted about it on Facebook so all his friends could follow his

adventures. Others were watching, too: A federal prosecutor in Seattle, where

Sopo was wanted on bank fraud charges.

Tracking Sopo through his public "friends" list, the prosecutor found his

address and had Mexican authorities arrest him. Instead of sipping pina

coladas, Sopo is awaiting extradition to the U.S.

Sopo learned the hard way: The Feds are on Facebook. And MySpace, LinkedIn and

Twitter, too.

Law enforcement agents are following the rest of the Internet world into

popular social-networking services, even going undercover with false online

profiles to communicate with suspects and gather private information, according

to an internal Justice Department document that surfaced in a lawsuit.

The document shows that U.S. agents are logging on surreptitiously to exchange

messages with suspects, identify a target's friends or relatives and browse

private information such as postings, personal photographs and video clips.

Among the purposes: Investigators can check suspects' alibis by comparing

stories told to police with tweets sent at the same time about their

whereabouts. Online photos from a suspicious spending spree people posing

with jewelry, guns or fancy cars can link suspects or their friends to crime.

The Justice document also reminds government attorneys taking cases to trial

that the public sections of social networks are a "valuable source" of

information on defense witnesses. "Knowledge is power," says the paper.

"Research all witnesses on social networking sites."

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based civil liberties

group, obtained the 33-page document when it sued the Justice Department and

five other agencies in federal court.

A decade ago, agents kept watch over AOL and MSN chat rooms to nab sexual

predators. But those text-only chat services are old-school compared with

today's social media, which contain a potential treasure trove of evidence.

The document, part of a presentation given in August by cybercrime officials,

describes the value of Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn and other services

to investigators. It does not describe in detail the boundaries for using them.

"It doesn't really discuss any mechanisms for accountability or ensuring that

government agents use those tools responsibly," said Marcia Hoffman, a senior

attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which sued to force the

government to disclose its policies for using social networking.

The foundation also obtained an Internal Revenue Service document that states

IRS employees cannot use deception or create fake accounts to get information.

Sopo's case didn't require undercover work; his carelessness provided the

clues. But covert investigations on social-networking services are legal and

governed by internal rules, according to Justice officials. They would not,

however, say what those rules are.

The document addresses a social-media bullying case in which U.S. prosecutors

charged a Missouri woman with computer fraud for creating a fake MySpace

account effectively the same activity that undercover agents are doing,

although for different purposes.

The woman, Lori Drew, posed as a teen boy and flirted with a 13-year-old

neighborhood girl. The girl hanged herself in October 2006, in a St. Louis

suburb, after she received a message saying the world would be better without

her. Drew was convicted of three misdemeanors for violating MySpace's rules

against creating fake accounts. But last year a judge overturned the verdicts,

citing the vagueness of the law.

"If agents violate terms of service, is that 'otherwise illegal activity'?" the

document asks. It doesn't provide an answer.

Facebook's rules, for example, specify that users "will not provide any false

personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than

yourself without permission." Twitter's rules prohibit users from sending

deceptive or false information. MySpace requires that information for accounts

be "truthful and accurate."

A former U.S. cybersecurity prosecutor, Marc Zwillinger, said investigators

should be able to go undercover in the online world the same way they do in the

real world, even if such conduct is barred by a company's rules. But there have

to be limits, he said.

"This new situation presents a need for careful oversight so that law

enforcement does not use social networking to intrude on some of our most

personal relationships," said Zwillinger, whose firm does legal work for Yahoo

and MySpace.

The Justice document describes how Facebook, MySpace and Twitter have

interacted with federal investigators: Facebook is "often cooperative with

emergency requests," the government said. MySpace preserves information about

its users indefinitely and even stores data from deleted accounts for one year.

But Twitter's lawyers tell prosecutors they need a warrant or subpoena before

the company turns over customer information, the document says.

"Will not preserve data without legal process," the document says under the

heading, "Getting Info From Twitter ... the bad news."

The chief security officer for MySpace, Hemanshu Nigam, said MySpace doesn't

want to stand in the way of an investigation. "That said, we also want to make

sure that our users' privacy is protected and any data that's disclosed is done

under proper legal process," Nigam said.

MySpace requires a search warrant for private messages less than six months

old, according to the company.

Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said the company has put together a handbook to

help law enforcement officials understand "the proper ways to request

information from Facebook to aid investigations."