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| What about CCP 18.21 sec 9(a)? As this was enacted in 2005, doesn't it "trump" an AG's opinion issued in February, 2000?
CCP Art. 18.21. PEN REGISTERS AND TRAP AND TRACE DEVICES; ACCESS TO STORED COMMUNICATIONS; MOBILE TRACKING DEVICES.
Reimbursement of costs
Sec. 9. (a) Except as provided by Subsection (c) of this section, an authorized peace officer who obtains information under this article shall reimburse the person assembling or providing the information for all costs that are reasonably necessary and that have been directly incurred in searching for, assembling, reproducing, or otherwise providing the information. These costs include costs arising from necessary disruption of normal operations of an electronic communications service or remote computing service in which the information may be stored.
I've been seeing a lot more of the "pay before you get it" issues lately, as well. Not sure what can really be done about it; especially when the subpoena is directed at an organization out of state. |
| Posts: 115 | Location: Denton, TX, USA | Registered: February 15, 2007 |
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| It can be stored somewhere without being stored in a manner useful for your purposes.
Suppose for example the call data is not stored under a specific phone number but rather in activity logs from each tower within the network.
In this example creating a history for a specific number would mean searching the logs for each tower and then merging those data points with information from multiple out-of-network providers.
I'm not trying to justify this behavior on the part of the telecoms ... just saying that it could be a significant amount of work depending on the phone company's IT infrastructure.
If you put a duces tecum whats to stop them from appearing with a truckload of raw data and telling you to go ahead and knock yourself out. |
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| More and more plans (like the one I have) are "unlimited" plans and there are no per minute charges. Thus, records of individual calls or numbers called may not be maintained for those accounts. The original post specifically addresses this issue - the cell phone companies are claiming that they charge only for unlimited calls, and thus do not maintian the records requested in the usual course of business. Imagine a request for the records of your office for all persons for whom the digits of their date of birth totaled 9. You probably have that information, just not in that form. To produce such a list, you would have to go through all the records, total the digits in the date of birth, and provide a response. The point is that just because you have information, it may not be kept in the form requested, so the provider may be entitled to a fee. |
| Posts: 325 | Location: Texas, USA | Registered: November 16, 2004 |
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