Subject: Email privacy case settled The long running Alcor/email case against the County and City of Riverside, CA was settled out of court in April of this year. The announcement was delayed until all parties had signed off, and the check (for $30k) had cleared the bank :-). The Alcor Life Extension Foundation (a non-profit cryonics organization --alcor@cup.portal.com) ran a BBS for members and prospective members from early 1987 through January 12, 1988. On that day, the BBS computer was removed under a warrant to take the computer (but no mention of any contained email) in connection with the investigation into the death of 83-year-old Dora Kent. (Mrs. Kent was placed into cryonic suspension by Alcor in December of 1987. During and following the investigation, Alcor staff members were publicly accused by county officials of murder, theft, and building code violations. No charges were ever filed and the investigation was officially closed three years later.) In December of 1988 Keith Henson filed a civil suit to force an investigation of the apparent violations of the Electronic Communication Privacy Act by the FBI, but the case was dismissed by the now convicted Judge Aguilar. In early 1990, just before the statute of limitations ran out, Henson and 14 others (of the roughly 50 people who had email on the system) filed a civil action against a number of officials and the County and City of Riverside, CA under Section 2707 of the Electronic Communication Privacy Act. Some time after the case was filed, the Electronic Frontier Foundation came into existence in response to law enforcement abuses involving a wide spectrum of the online community. EFF considered this case an important one, and helped the plaintiffs in the case by locating pro bono legal help. While the case was being transferred, the County and City offered a settlement which was close to the maximum damages which could have been obtained at trial. Although no precedent was set because the case did not go to trial, considerable legal research has been done, and one judgment issued in response to the Defendants' Motion to Dismiss. The legal filings and the responses they generated from the law firm representing the County/City and officials are available by email from mnemonic@eff.org or (with delay) from hkhenson@cup.portal.com. (They are also posted on Portal.) The Plaintiffs were represented by Christopher Ashworth of Garfield, Tepper, Ashworth and Epstein in Los Angeles (408-277-1981). A summary of the settlement agreement is attached. SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT This agreement is made and entered into in Riverside, California, this _____ day of ______ by and between [long list of defendants and plaintiffs] I. FACTUAL RECITALS 1. This Agreement is executed with reference to the following facts for purpose of this Agreement only. 2. On January 12, 1998, some of the Defendants, pursuant to a search warrant, entered into the premises of Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Riverside, California. 3. Upon entry into the property, some of the Defendants seized various items, including electronic media containing E-mail owned by the plaintiffs. 4. On or about January 11, 1990, plaintiffs commenced civil action No. SAC 90-021js in the United States District Court, Santa Ana ("the Action"), against the defendants for injuries and damages allegedly suffered as a result of the defendants' seizure of plaintiff's E-mail. 5 It is now the desire and intention of plaintiffs, on the one part, and defendants on the other part, to settle, compromise, and resolve all the differences, disagreements, and disputes, which exist and may exist, including those which are the subject matter of, referred to, related to, or mentioned in the Action. Pursuant to this desire, and in consideration of the mutual promises contained herein, the parties agree as follows. II CONSIDERATION 6. Upon the execution of this Agreement, defendants County of Riverside shall pay to plaintiffs, by check, the total sum of Thirty Thousand Dollars ($30,000), inclusive of attorney fees and cost. 7. [The rest of this is boilerplate, except that they wanted confidentiality of the agreement, to which we would not agree.]