New Jersey Congressman Lance Votes to Strengthen Email Privacy

Congressman Lance is administered the oath of office by House Speaker Paul Ryan. Lance’s wife, Heidi Rohrbach, is center
Congressman Lance is administered the oath of office by House Speaker Paul Ryan. Lance’s wife, Heidi Rohrbach, is center
Ammoland Shooting Sports
Ammoland Shooting Sports

WASHINGTON, D.C. -(Ammoland.com)- Congressman Leonard Lance (NJ-07) today supported passage of the Email Privacy Act, a bipartisan measure he co-sponsored to modernize electronic privacy laws and protect internet users from warrantless searches.

Lance serves as the Vice Chair of the Communications and Technology Subcommittee and updating privacy laws is one of his top priorities. The measure would revise an arcane 1986 law permitting warrantless searches of emails dated older than 6 months.

“Right now government officials can legally search some electronic communications—even emails—without a warrant. That needs to change. I firmly believe the protection from illegal search and seizure extends to emails and the digital space and this measure ends the ability of government to overreach. Email users deserve privacy and they do not want invasive federal agencies obtaining personal email account information and other digital communications without a warrant. It’s time to update email privacy laws and bring them into the 21st century,” said Lance.

The measure will update the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which currently allows government agencies the ability to access electronic communications that have been stored for 180 days without a warrant.

Under this statute, emails and other electronic communications do not receive the same Fourth Amendment protections as physical correspondence, which would require a warrant to access.

“By updating this statute we build trust among government, service providers and consumers,” concluded Lance.

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Ken Ashe

Lance does not care about privacy. He’s currently sponsoring a bill that would your mobile and internet provider to sell your internet history on the open market. This is the exact opposite of protecting Americans privacy. Can you please write an article about that?