January 27, 2011

Can Reading Other’s Emails Be Criminal?

It used to be couples embroiled in divorce battles would hire private investigators to collect evidence against each other. In this digital era, however, more people are relying on electronic means to snag their spouses in compromising situations. The ramifications of this are unclear.

In Rochester Hills, MI, a man is facing felony charges for allegedly hacking into his ex-wife’s computer to access her emails; if found guilty, he faces a prison term of up to five years. (1)

According to reports, Leon Walker is accused of using his ex-wife’s password to access her email, where he discovered alleged infidelities. Walker’s ex-wife, Clara, claims the computer was hers and the password that protected her account was kept secret. Walker counter-claimed that, although the two were divorced, they continued to share the same home and he had access to the computer. He further contended his ex-wife did not protect her passwords but kept them in a book beside the computer. (2)

Walker’s actions are not unusual – online communications, including social networks and email, are used to gather evidence in some 45% of divorce cases. Most often, however, this evidence is used in civil – not criminal – cases. The felony charge, therefore, is unusual. Walker is being prosecuted under the same hacking statute used in Michigan to prosecute identity or trade secret thefts. (2)

Emails, by their nature, are not private. Unlike telephone calls, emails are digital and can be stored in several locations – the sender’s and the receiver’s computers and on the ISP server – for a long time. This makes emails more easily accessible, reducing a person’s “reasonable expectation” of privacy. (3)

In a 2001 New Jersey case, White v White, the court cited this lack of “reasonable expectation” of privacy when it denied a motion to suppress emails. In that case, the court ruled that the husband had no “objective reasonable expectation” of privacy and, therefore, the wife’s accessing of his emails did not constitute an invasion of privacy. That court also found that, because the emails had been accessed after being sent and saved, the action did not violate the New Jersey Wiretap Act, which pertains only to emails in transmission. (4)

While waiting for the legal ambiguities to work themselves out, the prudent course of action is to remember that emails are not private and should contain only messages you wouldn’t mind others reading.

(1) http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/dpp/news/local/wife-of-accused-e-mail-snooper-leon-walker-speaks-out-20110121-mr

(2) http://www.freep.com/article/20101226/NEWS03/12260530/Is-reading-wife-s-e-mail-a-crime?-Rochester-Hills-man-faces-trial

(3) http://public.findlaw.com/internet/email-privacy.html

(4) http://caselaw.findlaw.com/nj-superior-court/1254960.html

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January 22, 2011

Are Children Conceived Posthumously Eligible for Survivor Benefits?

Social Security insurance provides survivor benefits for dependent children of deceased workers to help compensate for the loss of financial support. Dependent children are defined as unmarried and under age 18 (19 if still full-time high school students). But are children conceived after the death of a parent eligible for these benefits? According to a U.S. appeals court, they may be. (1)

Karen Capato, a New Jersey mother, filed for and was denied survivor benefits on behalf of her twins who had been conceived in vitro after the death of their father, Robert. Mr. Capato had his sperm frozen before undergoing treatments for cancer in the hopes of producing a sibling for the couple’s other child. Mr. Capato died in March 2002; the twins were born in September of the following year. (2)

According to Social Security regulations, applicants have the right to appeal an agency decision. That process has four levels: reconsideration, hearing, an Appeals Council review and a review by a Federal Court. (3)

When Mrs. Capato’s application for benefits was denied she appealed, but the agency’s decision was upheld by a lower court judge in New Jersey. Earlier this month, a U.S. appeals court in Philadelphia reversed the lower-court judge’s ruling. That court found no doubt the twins were the biological children of Karen and Robert Capato and, as such, may be entitled to Mr. Capato’s Social Security benefits. However, the court ruled that Mrs. Capato must prove the twins were dependents or “deemed to be dependents” of Mr. Capato at the time of his death. (4)

Although a bit unusual, this case is not unique. There are at least four cases in which the Social Security Administration is being sued for survivor benefits for children conceived after the death of their fathers, three of which are pending. (2)

Complicating the Capato case is the issue of residence. Rules regulating dependency under Social Security follow the inheritance laws of the various states. At the time of his death, Mr. Capato was residing in Florida where children conceived after the father’s death are not considered heirs unless expressly named in a will. Mr. Capato died before naming the twins in his will. However, the children were born in New Jersey where the law states they may be considered heirs. The case is now pending review by a U.S. District Court. (2)

(1) http://ssa.gov/pubs/10084.html

(2) http://www.trentonian.com/articles/2011/01/06/news/doc4d26542426cdc169599860.txt

(3) http://ssa.gov/pubs/10041.html

(4) http://www.mycentraljersey.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2011101060331

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January 10, 2011

New Laws Offer Help to Victims of Domestic Violence

As 2010 was drawing to a close, New Jersey lawmakers were busy adopting bills to improve the rights of victims of violent crimes including victims of domestic violence.

The first bill, which was signed into law last month by Gov. Chris Christie, extended the time-frame under which victims of violent crimes, including domestic violence, could, under certain circumstances, collect compensation benefits from the State through the Victims of Crime Compensation Office (VCCO).

Previously violent crime victims or, in some cases, their dependents and families, could receive State benefits to cover expenses incurred as a result of the crime for a period of five years after the crime was committed. Those expenses may include physical and mental medical bills and relocation costs.

The new law recognizes that the duration of criminal proceedings cannot be predicted and could actually take longer than the five-year time-frame for collecting benefits. Under the new law, if a victim has to relocate or seeks counseling out of fear of recurrence of the violence while the case is being resolved, the VCCO could approve additional compensation benefits if it takes more than five years to resolve that case. In order to be eligible for compensation, a victim or the family of a victim must report the crime within three months and file a claim application within two years of the crime. (1)

The second bill is aimed specifically at victims of domestic violence. This bill recognizes self-defense as an allowable justification in some cases where the victim uses force to protect him or herself from an abuser. This bill would allow such things as restraining orders, the reasons for such orders, any violation of the orders or commission of domestic violence by the person the restraining order was issued against to be considered when determining if force used by the victim against the abuser was justified. (2)

Domestic violence continues to be a growing concern. A report issued late last year noted that 73,709 incidents of domestic violence were reported in New Jersey in 2009, representing a 4% increase from the previous year, despite the fact that overall violent crimes in the State were down 4% for the same period. (3)

(1) http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/state/new-law-allows-nj-to-compensate-violent-crime-victims-5-years-after-incidents

(2) http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2010/12/domestic_violence_victims_righ.html

(3) http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/state/new-jersey-crime-rate-drops-9-percent

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