Law in the Internet Society

Paper Title The Right Against Self-Incrimination in the Digital Age

-- By NinniSusanThomas - 07 Jan 2022

Mobile phones almost being an extension of our lives, with it tracking every conversation, expenditure, location, can act as the pivotal part if one was to be involved in a criminal investigation. The question of whether a person can be forced to hand over passcodes of their electronic devices that could lead to self-incriminating information has been discussed in recent times in both the United States and India. It raises very interesting questions surrounding the right against self-incrimination and the right to privacy.

Current scenario in the United States

In the United States, relying on the foregone conclusion doctrine (Fisher v. United States), it may be argued that as the contents of the phones of accused would already be known to the investigating authorities, forcing them to give passwords of their phones cannot be seen as a violation of their right against self-incrimination. This question of law, wherein the extension of the right under the Fifth Amendment to not provide a phone’s password is pending in an appeal to the Supreme Court in Andrews v. New Jersey. There have been divergent views in multiple State Supreme Courts as well.

Context in India and current situation

Article 20(3) of the Constitution of India guarantees the right against self-incrimination. Over the years, the Indian Supreme Court’s judgments have provided different - and even conflicting - rationales for this right. These justifications can be broadly grouped into two categories: crime-control justifications and due process justifications. Crime-control justifications view the right against self-incrimination as instrumental towards the criminal law’s goal of uncovering the truth and punishing the guilty. According to this justification, forcing people to incriminate themselves will, more often than not, yield false testimony and lead criminal investigations astray. Due process justifications, on the other hand, view the right against self-incrimination to be part of a broader panoply of criminal procedure safeguards aimed at preserving the dignity of the individual, and maintaining a balance of power between the individual and the State.

The Indian Supreme Court has gone back and forth between these two justifications. The exact text of Article 20(3) reads: “no person accused of an offence shall be compelled to be a witness against himself.” In Kathi Kalu Oghad, the Supreme Court considered the question of whether compulsory taking of fingerprints and handwriting samples were hit by the bar against self-incrimination. The Court held that they were not. What weighed with the Court, among other things, was that fingerprints (and, to a lesser extent, handwriting samples) could not be altered by an individual at will. Consequently, whether or not these samples were coerced from an individual, their intrinsic qualities would remain unchanged. It can be clearly seen that this reasoning fits well within the crime-control justification: linking the right against self-incrimination to an individual’s ability (or lack thereof) to alter a piece of evidence directly flows from a primary concern about the goal of criminal law being to determine truth and punish the guilty.

On the other hand, in Selvi v State, the Supreme Court held that the compulsory taking of a lie-detector test, brain mapping (HEAP) test, and narco-analysis - all interrogation techniques - were all unconstitutional. In the course of its analysis, the Court did not ask about the alterability or mutability of the evidence (a brain scan, for example, would fall well within the unalterability paradigm), but focused instead on the right to mental privacy, and read Article 20(3) along with Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty) of the Indian Constitution.

There is thus a tension in Indian jurisprudence between the crime control and due process justifications of the right against self-incrimination. Whether the right, thus, protects data recovered from an individual’s personal mobile phone, or other device, in the course of investigation, depends on which of these justifications is held to be the correct understanding of Article 20(3). Under the due process justification, a person should be entitled to refuse to provide their password to the police during the investigation. Under the crime control justification, on the other hand, this refusal will be more difficult to defend.

Conclusion

The questions of whether forcing a person to provide their password or a fingerprint to allow investigating authorities to access their electronic devices is akin to being forced to give their DNA or undergo polygraph testing, which is clearly a violation of their privacy, will have to be debated further in both these jurisdictions.

The draft clears the space, as a first draft should: we know what the issue is. But nothing substantive was said here: some cases involving the general principle were mentioned, upon which it is solemnly concluded that the decision in future cases will depend on what the judges think.

But there are no real cases. It might be useful in coming to grips with the substantive issues to ask why. Here the apparent formal parity of Indian and US law cannot be maintained. The secrets of the poor are discovered in India by force; in the US, by the automated or nearly-automated cooperation of the intermediaries. Search warrants and subpoenas secure what forensics on seized phones don't provide.

To see an example of the alternate outcome, take a backward society with no significant protection for individual civil liberties: England. The mandatory surrender of mobile phones by rape complainants has played a significant role in deterring complaints and in giving prosecutors reason to decline cases, two of the factors in bringing about the de facto decriminalization of rape in the statelet.

So a slightly broader effort to understand legal and social context will provide in the next draft the improvement it needs.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list.

Navigation

Webs Webs

r2 - 07 Jan 2022 - 19:51:40 - EbenMoglen
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM