John —

Perhaps we should deputise ARIN employees as federal law enforcement
officers, provide them training and firearms, and let them root out
the rampent abuse in IP allocation. I think people would think twice
if they knew lying to ARIN was lying to a federal agent. They also
wouldn’t want the ARIN SWAT team breaking down their door with a
search warrant taking away their belongings.

Thoughts? I mean ARIN already does perform many functions you expect
from a law enforcement body but does so with greater success,
efficiency, and grace.

Sent from my iPhone

> On 15 May 2019, at 10:28, John Curran <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On 15 May 2019, at 2:53 AM, Michael Williams <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>> Hi John,
>>
>> I’m confused... how is ARIN *not* a law enforcement body? I’ve always been 
>> told to believe ARIN enforces the rules of the internet.
>
> Michael -
>
>    ARIN doesn’t enforce “rules of the internet” – we enforce Internet number 
> registry policy; i.e. a much smaller matter which simply relates to the 
> registry of unique numbers that help make the Internet run.
>
>    We fulfill our mission that same way nearly every other organization does 
> – by entering into contracts and enforcing those contracts via 
> arbitration/litigation.
>
>    Law enforcement is a different matter: it’s about enforcing the laws that 
> are adopted by government, and therefore apply to all folks without any need 
> for a contract or consent.
>
> Thanks!
> /John
>
> John Curran
> President and CEO
> American Registry for Internet Numbers
>
>
>
>
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