The DEA is spying on thousands of patient medical files without a warrant

Tuesday, September 8, 2015
By Paul Martin

MassPrivatei.blogspot.com
Monday, September 7, 2015

The Drug Enforcement Administration has been sifting through thousands of supposedly private medical files, looking for Texas doctors and patients to prosecute without the use of warrants.

“It’s not like there’s ten of them. There’s probably thousands — I know there are thousands,” Matt Barden, spokesman for the DEA, told the Daily Caller News Foundation about the DEA’s use of administrative subpoenas. But, as a legal brief filed last week points out, lawyers for the federal government can’t find a single case in which a court has “authorized the use of such a broad array of patient information with such a sparse record as to why it needs such information.”

In U.S. v Zadeh, the DEA obtained the records of 35 patient files without showing probable cause or obtaining a warrant issued by a judge. Citing New Deal-era case law, Judge Reed O’Connor noted that “the Supreme Court has refused to require that a federal agency have probable cause to justify issuance of an administrative subpoena,” and that they may be issued “merely on suspicion that the law is being violated, or even just because it wants assurance that it is not.”

The Rest…HERE

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