AP Explains: Why smartphones are giving the police fits
BOSTON — The phone used by the gunman who fatally shot 26 people inside a small Texas church has become the latest flashpoint in the privacy wars.
Federal investigators complain that they can’t get into Devin Patrick Kelley’s phone thanks to security features that shield messages, photos and other stored data from prying eyes. Such measures present a growing frustration for the FBI, which says it’s been unable to retrieve data from roughly half the mobile devices it’s recently tried to access.
Technology companies insist that strong security based on data-scrambling encryption is essential to protecting digital privacy. Law enforcement officials grumble that warrants should allow them to sidestep such measures; the companies say they often can’t unlock such phones even if ordered to.
The gunman’s phone was flown to an FBI computer investigation lab in Quantico, Virginia, in an effort to gain access to it, said Christopher Combs, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s San Antonio division. Combs declined to release the make or model of the phone.