Police Want the Password to Your Phone
Without a warrant and specific proof of incriminating evidence, police should never be allowed past your phone’s lock screen.

Growing police power has gravely distorted interactions between cops and citizens. Officers arrive with not just a gun and body armor but with wide-ranging legal immunities and both the privilege and training to lie to you during questioning.
Now they want to force you to unlock your phone.
The amount of personal data we keep on our smartphones is almost immeasurable, a reality the Supreme Court recognized in 2014 when it ruled that police must comply with the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement to search your device. But your phone has a simpler safeguard: a password that, under the Fifth Amendment, you shouldn't have to reveal unless the government overcomes your right against self-incrimination.
It's a right with deep roots, dating back to fourth-century Christian thinker St. John Chrysostom, who argued that no one should be required to confess their sins in public because it would discourage people from confessing at all.
By the 17th century, English common law had begun to develop these ideas into a right not to be interrogated under oath. The right achieved major recognition after the infamous Star Chamber sentenced prominent natural rights thinker John Lilburne to approximately 500 lashes for refusing to testify against himself. Lilburne remained a significant English philosopher and politician for decades while the Star Chamber was abolished just four years later.
Lilburne's case was so influential that colonial America enshrined the privilege against self-incrimination in nine state constitutions before it even became part of the Bill of Rights. Today, police act as if smartphones and digital technology invalidate those protections. They don't.
It doesn't matter if you haven't broken the law or you think you have nothing to hide. What matters is whether police believe—rightly or wrongly—that you have done something illegal or that you have something to hide. Police are incentivized not to protect rights but to arrest people allegedly (or actually) breaking laws.
Without a warrant and specific proof of incriminating evidence, police should never be allowed past your phone's lock screen.
Unfortunately, your Fourth Amendment right against warrantless searches and seizures is insufficient to stop police from scouring the trove of personal data on your phone for information unrelated to their investigation. Police can seize your device before they get a warrant and if they have the passcode nothing stops them from performing an off-the-record search—even if they might be later prevented from introducing that information in court.
Once police get warrants to perform specific searches—which courts regularly grant—they often retain smartphones far longer than needed to execute the narrow bounds of the warrant. They may try to introduce the evidence they "coincidentally" discovered, even if it falls outside the warrant's scope.
That gives police and prosecutors a lot of leverage. If they can't find what they need, they might still be able to pressure you into a false confession by threatening to charge you with something else—a practice known as coercive plea bargaining. With thousands of crimes on the books and years of life history on your phone, even the most law-abiding citizens could easily end up in hot water. This kind of pressure is why criminologists estimate that roughly two percent to eight percent of people who plead guilty every year are factually innocent.
But when police don't have your password, the dynamic changes. While law enforcement might eventually succeed in petitioning courts to make you unlock your device, you could thwart their petition by offering to provide your password to a trusted third party instead. This auditor would watch police searches to ensure they stay within a warrant's borders, preventing curious cops from reading the messy details of your last breakup and keeping your password out of police custody.
Unfortunately, the current state of Fifth Amendment case law is a mess. For one, a handful of courts have given police a loophole to your right against compelled testimony by reasoning that your password adds "little or nothing to the sum total of the Government's information" because police already know your password exists, just not what it is. This twisted reasoning ignores that police have no idea what's on your phone without the password.
And even some jurisdictions that eschew such silly reasoning may treat biometric passwords differently, ruling that police can make you unlock your phone via thumbprint or face scan because you aren't sharing "the contents of your mind." This has the strange result of providing more protection from unlawful searches to people who don't use modern unlock methods or who disable them by turning off their phones.
Congress must set a clear standard: Police should prove with specificity what's on your phone before forcing it open, and only after the device's owner has consulted with a lawyer. Doing so would provide citizens a means to ensure police follow warrant requirements without sacrificing law enforcement's ability to pursue the crime they're investigating. Your passcode and your right to keep it private exist for good reason, and Congress can restore much-need balance to the police-citizen relationship by preventing judicial chaos from eroding those boundaries.
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If you don’t give police the password to your phone they might reach out, reach out and touch someone.
Then you reach out to the ACLU and Rutherford Inst., sue the pants off the police department.
And then 9 times out of 10 they get "qualified immunity" and a paid vacation while the wrongdoers investigate themselves.
Congress must set a clear standard
Good luck with that. Congress doesn't set standards. They write vague laws and let the executive make all the rules.
It’s the little known “pen and phone” clause in the constitution.
What does the 14A have to do with this? 4A and 5A sure do. Reason is in dire need of higher quality editing.
Several Supreme Court rulings have held that most of the Bill of Rights also apply to the states. That means local police need to abide by the Fourth Amendment via the 14th Amendment. Now we all know the police don't give a good goddamn about your constitutional rights, but it's a nice idea.
The ACTUAL LANGUAGE of the "Bill of Rights" requires that, ALL of the amendments, with the possible exception of the 1st, have applied to the states from the instant they were ratified. The 14th amendment is 100% IRRELEVANT to applying any clause in the Constitution, including amendments, to states.
Note: The first amendment state Congress (referring to the federal Congress) shall make no law ...
The rest of the Bill of rights states that certain rights shall not be violated, with NO limits on who shall not violate them.
Therefore, the 4th amendment DOES NOT apply to state and local governments "via the 14th amendment" It applies by its own language, and did so long before the 14th amendment was written,
Today, on this week’s episode of:
“Show me your papers, or I’ll take you to jail without a reason.”
…and that is just if you are a white dude. Results may vary if you have darker skin.
Good luck convincing "back the blue" MAGAts in Congress to curtail these abuses of the police power.
As if the Democrats have any better track record on this point. The number of congresscritters who actually care about reining in police abuses can be counted on one hand.
"The number of congresscritters who actually care about reining in police abuses can be counted on one hand."
It's kind of hard to count to zero on your fingers. 🙂
Much rather live with the cops (who leave you alone if you’re BLM - not out protesting J6!) than ANTIFA & BLM!
"Without a warrant and specific proof of incriminating evidence, police should never be allowed past your phone’s lock screen."
Unless of course you're with the FBI looking for garage door openers that look like a noose, hunting down Catholics or someone who has the temerity to contradict Dear Leader Biden.
"Congress must set a clear standard"
That word "must" you have been using - I don't think it means what you think it means! It implies that there will be some sort of penalty for Congress if it fails to do so. And even if Congress did, miraculously, set a clear standard, it would not prevent immune cops from violating the law or the Bill of Rights. Currently a power-mad official is less likely to experience adverse consequences from their misbehavior than they are to be struck by lightning.
The amount of personal data we keep on our smartphones is almost immeasurable
What retard does that?
I don’t care even slightly about anyone who throws their privacy away by putting it in something as public as a smartphone. If you do banking or stock trading or healthcare monitoring on your smartphone – or, worse, social media – then you are a retard and you deserve what you get. Sorry not sorry, screw you, you're an idiot. What I do care about, however, is all the ways your smartphone spies on you – how it has, retains, and transmits all the data you don’t intend to store.
And I’m not talking about some tinfoil notion of “the microphone and camera is always on” – I’m talking about geodata and message/photo “backup” and apps that exist for the singular purpose of data mining (literally every grocery/restaurant/retailer “loyalty club” app and streaming service does this, whatever savings or deals or entertainment they provide is a secondary effect). I got real ticked off recently when I got tickets to a show, that could only be redeemed via an app. An app that asks for all kinds of permissions it shouldn’t need in order to function. Not necessary and not cool.
Smartphones are an amazing invention. We literally carry around the compendium of human knowledge in our pants pocket. But we’ve willingly traded virtually every iota of privacy in order to have it. YOU have to decide – do you to give that to Big Tech, and by extension the State, in return for all the modern conveniences – or do you not?
Most people don’t care, because they have nothing to hide. The folks that do – from the ultra-rich to politicians to crimelords to Islamic terrorists – they know the reality of it, and it’s why they go low-tech.
You can’t have your cake and eat it too.
Famous last words," Go ahead, I have nothing to hide."
https://larryformanlaw.com/why-you-should-never-talk-to-the-police-period/
I agree with what you said, but I also think you missed my point.
Only you would intentionally elide an article about the bad things that cops do to what their victims do.
"What retard does that?"
BTW, you don't need to give permission for the phone itself to track and record you, it does it anyway. So if you have a smartphone the retard is you.
Indeed.
Your mobile phone doesn't have to be smart to be tracked.
If you keep your money in a public bank you are a retard. If you keep your cash under your mattress you are a retard. If you give your social security number to your employer you are a retard. If you work for an employer who uses a bank to pay you and withholds some of your pay to send to the government you are a retard. One of these days it might sink in that government is everywhere, controlling almost all of your alternatives. The answer is not for us to go off of the grid but, rather, to take back control of our government. But by all means, rant impotently and shake your tiny fist at the heavens in rage.
You do your banking on your phone, don't you.
Go back to your cave and hope the fire doesn't go out tonight. Your opinions are pretty much worthless to anyone living after 1901.
"Go back to your cave and hope the fire doesn’t go out tonight. Your opinions are pretty much worthless to anyone living after 1901."
Insults are the last refuge of those who realize that they're losing an argument because they have nothing of substance to offer.
Yea, he does his banking on his phone.
Suppose I don't own a cell phone. which I do not. Does that make me even more suspicious?
Don't want one
Don't need one
Don't have one
If I did want one I would buy one of those cheap track phones.
What's your favorite Taylor Swift song?
WHAT DO YOU MEAN YOU DON'T HAVE A FAVORITE TAYLOR SWIFT SONG?! ARE YOU EVEN A HUMAN BEING?
I still listen to the Allman Brothers, Clapton, The Beatles and Jazz.
Frank Zappa too.
Show this article to all the idiots excited about getting "mobile drivers licenses" on their phones. You think the police are just gonna look at your MDL and happily hand the phone back to you?
You have the right to remain silent... Do so and ask for an attorney.
> Police are incentivized not to protect rights but to arrest people
allegedly (or actually) breaking laws.FIFY
The NSA already has all the information on your phone..
They need it to protect national security.
Without a warrant and specific proof of incriminating evidence, police should never be allowed past your phone’s lock screen.
Without a warrant based on specific proof, they have no right to even see the lock screen.
While I have a smart phone, its primary purpose is a phone, but I make most of my calls from a landline. Its secondary purpose is a texting device, but I do most of my texting from my PC. Occasionally I will use it as a GPS device, or a diagnostics tool, but I don't do any business on it, or social media conversations. If an officer wanted to see it, and cites what he thinks is "just cause", I'd unlock it for him and hand it over. Unless he makes up a crime, he will find nothing incriminating on it, because there is nothing incriminating there.