Details emerge on FBI's secret demand for Indymedia logs

http://news.com.com/2061-10796_3-5815946.html?part=rss&tag=5815946&subj=news

Previously-secret court documents that are now public provide an unusual
glimpse into how the federal government gained access to the server of an
independent news site.

In October 2004, a federal prosecutor sent a subpoena to Rackspace Managed
Hosting of San Antonio, Tex., as part of an investigation of an attempted
murder underway in Italy. Under a mutual legal assistance treaty, the U.S.
government is required to help other nations secure evidence in certain
criminal cases.

The newly-disclosed subpoena, which has been partially redacted, asks only
for specific "log files."

But Rackspace turned over the entire hard drive at the time, taking the
server offline and effectively pulling the plug on over 20 Independent Media
Center Web sites for about a week.

Rackspace claimed at the time that the subpoena required the company to turn
over the customer's "hardware."

Now that the documents have been unsealed by a federal judge in Texas,
though, Rackspace is backpedalling. "A Rackspace employee mistakenly used
the word 'hardware' to describe the contents of a federal order," company
spokeswoman Annalie Drusch said in an e-mail message to CNET News.com on
Tuesday.

Drusch's e-mail also said: "Rackspace employees searched for the specific
information requested in the subpoena but were unable to locate this
information prior to the strict delivery deadline imposed by the FBI. In
order to comply with the mandated deadline, Rackspace delivered copied
drives to the FBI. Shortly thereafter, Rackspace succeeded in isolating and
extracting the relevant files responsive to the subpoena and immediately
asked that the drives be returned by the FBI. The FBI returned the drives,
and it was our understanding that at no time had they been reviewed by the
FBI. The relevant files were then delivered to the FBI."

Kurt Opsahl, an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, says that
Rackspace handed over far more than was legally necessary. EFF is
representing the Indymedia collective and won the release of the secret
court documents.

"It would be like getting a subpoena for one document in a warehouse of
documents -- and instead of turning over that document, they turned over the
entire warehouse," Opsahl said.

http://news.com.com/2061-10796_3-5815946.html?part=rss&tag=5815946&subj=news



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