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FBI Director: Unlocking Apple Phone Not Expanding Federal Surveillance Authority

FBI Director James Comey

By Julia Harte and Julia Edwards

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey told a congressional panel on Tuesday that a court order forcing Apple Inc <AAPL.O> to give the FBI data from an iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters would be "potentially precedential" in other cases where the agency might request similar cooperation from technology companies.

The remarks are a slight change to Comey's statement last week that forcing Apple to unlock the phone was "unlikely to be a trailblazer" for setting a precedent for other cases.

The issue of precedent is central in the public fight between Apple and the U.S. government over the shooter's iPhone, which Apple has cast as a pivotal case that could lead to loss of privacy for all its customers and should be decided by Congress rather than a court.

Comey acknowledged on Tuesday that the FBI would seek to use the same statute it is trying to apply in the San Bernardino case to compel Apple to unlock other phones, "if (the statute) is available to us."

Members of the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee seized on Comey's statement that the case could set a legal precedent allowing the agency access to any encrypted device.

"Given... that Congress has explicitly denied you that authority so far, can you appreciate our frustration that this case appears to be little more than an end run around this committee?" asked the committee's ranking minority member, Michigan Representative John Conyers.

Comey responded that the FBI was not asking to expand the government’s surveillance authority, but rather to maintain its ability to obtain electronic information under legal authorities that Congress has already provided.

On Thursday, Apple filed a motion to vacate a court order demanding it unlock the phone. Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook has said he is willing to take the case to the Supreme Court.

A federal judge handed Apple a victory in another phone unlocking case in Brooklyn on Monday, ruling that he did not have the legal authority to order Apple to disable the security of an iPhone that was seized during a drug investigation.

Apple's general counsel, Bruce Sewell, is expected to argue before the committee later on Tuesday that creating a tool to unlock the phone would weaken the security of hundreds of millions of Apple devices.

"Hackers and cyber criminals could use this to wreak havoc on our privacy and personal safety," according to his prepared remarks.

Meanwhile, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch called for greater cooperation between tech companies and the U.S. government in prepared remarks for the RSA Cybersecurity conference in San Francisco on Tuesday, saying "we don’t necessarily have to be locked in perpetual and perfect agreement – but we do have to be engaged in open dialogue." Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance will also testify in support of the FBI on Tuesday, arguing that default device encryption "severely harms" criminal prosecutions at the state level, including in cases in his district involving at least 175 iPhones. Vance's office has drafted legislation it wants Congress to enact that would go beyond the single court case and require companies like Apple to ensure that their devices could be accessed in unencrypted form.

The U.S. Justice Department has sought court orders to force Apple to extract data from 15 devices in the past four months, beginning with a case in Brooklyn in which Apple declined to cooperate with investigators in October.

(Reporting by Julia Edwards and Julia Harte; Editing by Grant McCool and Bill Rigby)