- Nov 17, 2019
- 13,245
- 7,854
- 136

Trump SCOTUS Appointees Rule Against Admin's Interpretation of Fraud Act
"On the Government's reading of the statute, an employee who sends a personal e-mail or reads the news using her work computer has violated" the law, Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote.

"As part of Van Buren's job, he had access to a law enforcement database of license plate and vehicle registration information. After he ran a license plate search, prosecutors charged him with fraud and with violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
Van Buren was convicted on both counts and sentenced to 18 months in prison. He argued that the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act didn't apply because he accessed a database that he was authorized to access."
That may be true, but he did for for unauthorized purposes.
Donny's lackeys ruled against his DOJ arguments:
"Lawyers for Van Buren had warned when the case was argued in late November that if the court ruled against him it could have sweeping consequences. They argued it could make a federal crime out of using a computer for virtually any unauthorized purpose, from "checking sports scores at work to inflating one's height on a dating website."
The court agreed. Trump's three appointees to the court joined the three liberals to rule for Van Buren. Barrett wrote for the majority that the government's interpretation of the law "would attach criminal penalties to a breathtaking amount of commonplace computer activity." She said if the government's interpretation of the law were correct, then "millions of otherwise law-abiding citizens are criminals.""
That's correct, it should be a violation. Many workplace computers have a large amount of private data and those systems should never have public web access.