We Don’t Need No Stinking Warrant: The Disturbing, Unchecked Rise of the Administrative Subpoena
By David Kravets
When Golden Valley Electric Association of rural Alaska got an
administrative subpoena from the Drug Enforcement Administration in
December 2010 seeking electricity bill information on three customers,
the company did what it usually does with subpoenas — it ignored them.
That’s the association’s customer privacy policy, because administrative subpoenas aren’t approved by a judge.
But by law, utilities must hand over customer records — which include
any billing and payment information, phone numbers and power
consumption data — to the DEA without court warrants if drug agents
believe the data is “relevant” to an investigation. So the utility
eventually complied, after losing a legal fight earlier this month.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
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