Monday, October 12, 2015

Accused Murderers Not Allowed Access Victim's Social Media Info

Prior to trial two accused murderers will not be allowed to access the social media info of the victim and a witness.
 
Facebook Inc. v. Superior Court of S.D. City & Cty., 2015 BL 289675, Cal. Ct. App., No. A144315, 9/8/15

    The court quashed subpoenas from the accused that sought the victim and witness's subscriber information from Facebook Inc., Instagram LLC, and Twitter Inc. The social media companies' motions to quash were initially denied by the trial court. The companies petitioned for a write of mandate in the appellate court, and argued that the trial court abused its discretion.

    Though there are certain exceptions to The Stored Communications Act-which prohibits subscriber information disclosure-there is not a mechanism for criminal defendants to gain access to private communication content.

    The court was not convinced that the defendants' constitutional rights to present a complete defense, to cross-examine witnesses, and to have a fair trial, trumped the rights of privacy that the account holders have under the SCA. The court indicated that the Sixth Amendment right to confrontation and cross-examination does not guarantee pretrial access to otherwise privileged or confidential information.

    The court indicated that the level of sensitivity of the digital information that can be considered in legal proceedings is high. The court was reluctant, and indicated that many other judges are as well, to allow for a broad "everything under the sun" discovery when it comes to electronically stored information of this sort.

     For criminal situations, the SCA only allows for content disclosure to a government agency or entity pursuant to a warrant or by an administrative subpoena or a court order. The government agency is required to give specific facts showing there are reasonable grounds to believe the contents of the communication, the communication here being social media, is relevant to an ongoing criminal investigation.

     This decision is only related to pretrial discovery. The court said that "[n]othing in this opinion would preclude Defendants from seeking at trial the production of the materials sought here (or petitioners again seeking to quash subpoenas), where the trial court would be far better equipped to balance the Defendants' need for effective cross-examination and the policies the SCA is intended to serve."

http://www2.bloomberglaw.com/public/desktop/document/Facebook_Inc_v_Superior_Court_of_SF_City__Cty_No_A144315_2015_BL_

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.