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© AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan
The Federal Bureau of Investigation lost an appeal Monday to delay a lawsuit filed by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy advocacy group that's suing the agency for information related to its StingRay cellphone surveillance technology.

StingRay technology first began to attract attention when it was revealed to have been used to apprehend David Rigmaiden, a suspect in an electronic tax fraud ring indicted in 2008. Rigmaiden's requests to provide details of how the FBI was able to locate him revealed the use of StingRay, a technology which fools cell phones within a certain range into linking with the technology, as though it was a real cell tower. By harvesting the data provided by a mass of cellphones, StingRay can physically locate a designated device.

Privacy advocates like the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the ACLU argue that StingRay's bulk data collection method violates the privacy of cell phone users who are unwittingly targeted by the tool. In addition, the ACLU has presented evidence that the FBI has not always been honest about its intent to deploy StingRay when filing warrants with federal judges.

If the ACLU's lawsuit is successful, it would imply that the FBI has knowingly requested "general warrants," which would violate Americans' Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure.

In February of 2012, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) submitted a Freedom of Information Act request to the FBI for an extensive number of documents and specifications on StingRay and similar "simulator technologies." EPIC is requesting information regarding the bureau's procedural requirements and guidelines for the use of StingRay, as well as the legal basis for the use of such technologies.

In response to the request, the FBI attempted to ask for a two-year delay in releasing the records. A federal judge rejected that request, saying the bureau's justification that it was already overwhelmed by FOIA requests did not meet the criteria for an "exceptional circumstance."

As the appeal was rejected, the FBI must now produce any non-exempt documents by August 1. In addition it has until the end of May to say how many of the documents in question will be subject to a classification-declassification review.

EPIC has already obtained a number of documents relating to the FBI's use of cellphone tracking tools. Documents presented to the organization have revealed that agents received "extensive training" on such technology in 2007, and that similar devices have been in use to monitor cell phones since 1995.

According to a presentation included in the documents given to EPIC by the FBI, the bureau considers such cell phone emulators to be "pen register devices" - tools that can record all numbers called from one particular telephone line; such instruments have been in use in some form since the advent of basic telephone technology.