The Fourth Amendment is under attack in an age of electronic surveillance and expanding government. The Email Privacy Act, H.R. 699, and its Senate companion bill S. 356, is marching toward bipartisan agreement in Congress. The legislation would give government agencies access to your email, text messages and documents without a warrant from storage systems like “the Cloud.” A broader interest in privacy rights has received national attention in the last few years, since Edward Snowden revealed that the NSA was spying on American citizens. While Big Brother isn’t directly knocking on your front door, Big Brother is knocking on the door to your email account.
The bills tiptoes around the the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, as well as requires a warrant to be judiciously sanction. The Email Privacy Act would allow state agencies to issue judgeless administrative subpoenas to collect private data stored on remote devices. It encourages Big Government to target minorities that are considered a “threat,” including religious practitioners, non-profit organizations and government critics.(1)