United States v. Councilman

418 F.3d 67, 36 Communications Reg. (P&F) 737, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16803, 2005 WL 1907258
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 2005
Docket03-1383
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 418 F.3d 67 (United States v. Councilman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Councilman, 418 F.3d 67, 36 Communications Reg. (P&F) 737, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16803, 2005 WL 1907258 (1st Cir. 2005).

Opinions

Opinion En Banc

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

This case presents an important question of statutory construction. We must decide whether interception of an e-mail message in temporary, transient electronic storage states an offense under the Wiretap Act, as amended by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2522. The government believes it does, and indicted Councilman under that theory. The district court disagreed and dismissed the indictment. A divided panel of this court affirmed. We granted review en banc and now reverse.1

I.

A. An Introduction to Internet E-mail

The Internet is a network of interconnected computers. Data transmitted across the Internet are broken down into small “packets” that are forwarded from one computer to another until they reach their destination, where they are reconstituted. See Orin S. Kerr, Internet Surveillance Law After the USA Patriot Act: The Big Brother that Isn’t, 97 Nw. U.L.Rev. 607, 613-14 (2003). Each service on the Internet — e.g., e-mail, the World Wide Web, or instant messaging — has its own protocol for using packets of data to transmit information from one place to another. The e-mail protocol is known as Simple MailvTransfer Protocol (“SMTP”).

After a user composes a message in an e-mail client program,2 a program called a mail transfer agent (“MTA”) formats that message and sends it to another program that “packetizes” it and sends the packets out to the Internet. Computers on the network then pass the packets from one to another; each computer along the route [70]*70stores the packets in memory, retrieves the addresses of their final destinations, and then determines where to send them next. At various points the packets are reassembled to form the original e-mail message, copied, and then repacketized for the next leg of the journey. See J. Klen-sin, RFC 2821: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (Apr.2001), at http:// www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2821.txt; Jonathan B. Postel, RFC 821: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (Aug.1982), at http:// www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc821.txt (“RFC 821 ”). Sometimes messages cannot be transferred immediately and must be saved for later delivery. Even when delivery is immediate, intermediate computers often retain backup copies, which they delete later. This method of transmission is commonly called “store and forward” delivery.

Once all the packets reach the recipient’s mail server, they are reassembled to form the e-mail message. A mail delivery agent (“MDA”) accepts the message from the MTA, determines which user should receive the message, and performs the actual delivery by placing the message in that user’s mailbox. One popular MDA is “procmail,” which is controlled by short programs or scripts called “recipe files.” These recipe files can be used in various ways. For example, a procmail recipe can instruct the MDA to deposit mail addressed to one address into another user’s mailbox (e.g., to send mail addressed to “help” to the tech support department), to reject mail from certain addresses, or to make copies of certain messages.

Once the MDA has deposited a message into the recipient’s mailbox, the recipient simply needs to use an e-mail client program to retrieve and read the message.3 While the journey from sender to recipient may seem rather involved, it usually takes just a few seconds, with each intermediate step taking well under a second. See, e.g., W. Houser et al., RFC 1865: EDI Meets the Internet (Jan.1996), at http:// wvTV.ietf.org/rfe/rfc1865.txt (“For a modest amount of data with a dedicated connection, a message transmission would occur in a matter of seconds.... ”).

B. Facts Alleged in the Indictment

Defendant-appellee Bradford C. Councilman was Vice President of Interloe, Inc., which ran an online rare and out-of-print book listing service. As part of its service, Interloe gave book dealer customers an email address at the domain “interloc.com” and acted as the e-mail provider. Councilman managed the e-mail service and the dealer subscription list.

According to the indictment, in January 1998, Councilman directed Interloe employees to intercept and copy all incoming communications to subscriber dealers from Amazon.com, an Internet retailer that sells books and other products. Interiors systems administrator modified the server’s procmail recipe so that, before delivering any message from Amazon.com to the recipient’s mailbox, procmail would copy the message and place the copy in a separate mailbox that Councilman could access. Thus, procmail would intercept and copy all incoming messages from Amazon.com before they were delivered to the recipient’s mailbox, and therefore, before the intended recipient could read the message. This diversion intercepted thousands of messages, and Councilman and other In-terloe employees routinely read the e-mail messages sent to Interloe subscribers in [71]*71the hope of gaming a commercial advantage.

C. Procedural History

On July 11, 2001, a grand jury returned a two-count indictment against Councilman. Count One charged him under 18 U.S.C. § 371, the general federal criminal conspiracy statute, for conspiracy to violate the Wiretap Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2511,4 by intercepting electronic communications, disclosing their contents, using their contents, and causing a person providing an electronic communications service to divulge the communications’ contents to persons other than the addressees.5 The object of the conspiracy was to exploit the content of e-mail from Amazon.com to dealers in order to develop a list of books, learn about competitors, and attain a commercial advantage for Interloc and its parent company.6

The parties, stipulated to certain undisputed facts: the procmail recipe worked only within the confínes of Interloc’s computer; at all times at which procmail performed operations affecting the e-mail system, the messages existed “in the random access memory (RAM) or in hard disks, or both, within Interloc’s computer system”; and each e-mail message, while traveling through wires, was an “electronic communication” under 18 U.S.C. § 2510(12).

Councilman moved to dismiss the indictment for failure to state an offense under the Wiretap Act, arguing that the intercepted e-mail messages were in “electronic storage,” as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 2510(17), and therefore were not, as a matter of law, subject to the prohibition on “intercepting] ... electronic communication[s],” 18 U.S.C. § 2511(1)(a). The district court initially denied the motion to dismiss. As trial preparation began, however, the district court sua sponte reconsidered its decision in light of the then-reeently decided case of Konop v. Hawaiian Airlines, Inc.,

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418 F.3d 67, 36 Communications Reg. (P&F) 737, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 16803, 2005 WL 1907258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-councilman-ca1-2005.