The case was triggered by an explicit image of a child which was
sent over Yahoo!'s instant messaging network. The internet protocol
(IP) address was traced to Javier Perez.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) searched Perez's
residence under warrant and discovered several CDs in his room that
carried images of child porn. It was the only room of the house
that was searched.
It soon transpired that the Yahoo! account used to send the
original image belonged to someone listed as Rob Ram. Perez shared
his residence with Robert Ramos and operated an open wireless
internet (Wi-Fi) connection.
Perez argued that his open connection meant that anybody within
200 feet could have used his internet connection, meaning that it
could not be conclusively proved that the original instant message
came from him.
This in turn meant that the search warrant was issued in error
and the evidence on the CDs gathered illegally. That evidence
should be disregarded and the conviction based on it quashed, Perez
argued.
The US Court of Appeal for the Fifth Circuit has rejected
Perez's case, saying that the evidence should not be
disregarded.
"In this case it is clear that there was a substantial basis to
conclude that evidence of criminal activity would be found at [the
address]," the judge wrote. "[T]hough it was possible that the
transmissions originated outside of the residence to which the IP
address was assigned, it remained likely that the source of the
transmissions was inside that residence."
Some people involved in unlawful activity such as music and film
file-sharing have reportedly begun opening up their wireless
networks as a pre-emptive court defence. They argue that it could
not be subsequently proved that they were behind the file-sharing
if their network was open and, theoretically, anyone in the
vicinity could have used their network for any purpose they
liked.
OUT-LAW last year reported the case of Tammie Marson, a US
resident who argued that her open Wi-Fi network meant that it could
not be proved that she engaged in file sharing.
Marson had been accused by record labels Virgin, Sony BMG,
Arista, Universal and Warner Brothers of illegally sharing
copyrighted music files.
Marson's lawyer Seyamack Kouretchian of Coast Law Group told
OUT-LAW Radio that evidence that
Marson's connection was used was not enough. "The best that they
could do, the absolute best was prove that the music was on a
computer that had accessed the internet through her internet
connection," he said. "You had neighbours who would have had access
to her internet connection over a wireless router so it could have
been anybody."
The record labels backed down from their case against
Marson.
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