Apple opposes US appeal over iPhone in New York drug case

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The US Justice Department has noted that some 70 times before the Brooklyn case emerged, Apple had helped authorities access data on iPhones.
The US Justice Department has noted that some 70 times before the Brooklyn case emerged, Apple had helped authorities access data on iPhones.

New York - Apple says the US government had failed to show a continued need for its help

By Reuters

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Published: Sun 17 Apr 2016, 12:00 AM

Last updated: Mon 18 Apr 2016, 8:33 AM

Apple said the US government had failed to show a continued need for its help accessing a locked iPhone in a New York drug case after a third party came forward with a solution to crack a different phone belonging to one of the shooters in December's San Bernardino killings. The technology company made the argument in a brief filed in federal court in the New York City borough of Brooklyn on Friday, a week after the US Department of Justice said it would push forward with its appeal of a federal magistrate's ruling saying he could not force the company to assist authorities.
The government's decision to continue appealing the February ruling at a higher level, to US District Judge Margo Brodie, came after an outside party provided the US Federal Bureau of Investigation a way to access the phone in the San Bernardino case without Apple's help.
In its brief, Apple argued the government had not said if it had tried to use the secret method from the San Bernardino case on the iPhone in the drug case, nor if authorities had consulted with the unnamed third party or anyone else about it.
Apple, which reiterated many of its other legal arguments in the case, said the government "has utterly failed to satisfy its burden to demonstrate that Apple's assistance in this case is necessary."
The Justice Department, in a statement, noted that some 70 times before the Brooklyn case emerged, Apple had helped authorities access data on iPhones.
"Indeed, Apple has said it would take them only a few hours to open this kind of phone, because they already have a mechanism that would allow them to do so," the Justice Department said.


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