Privacy dilemma illustrated in Vermont library
Canadian Privacy Law Blog:
The local Halifax paper is running an AP story about the tough choices that custodians of personal information are sometimes called upon to make. After a young girl went missing, the police showed up at the public library demanding to take the public access computers that the girl had apparently used to communicate on MySpace. The librarian stood her ground and demanded that the police get a warrant. They did. Here’s the full story:
Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca
Police raid on library offers privacy dilemma
By JOHN CURRAN The Associated Press
Sun. Jul 20 - 5:19 AM
RANDOLPH, Vt. — Children’s librarian Judith Flint was getting ready for the monthly book discussion group for eight and nine-year-olds on Love That Dog when police showed up.
They weren’t kidding around: Five state police detectives wanted to seize Kimball Public Library’s public access computers as they frantically searched for a 12-year-old girl, acting on a tip that she sometimes used the terminals.
Flint demanded a search warrant, touching off a confrontation that pitted the privacy rights of library patrons against the rights of police on official business.
“It’s one of the most difficult situations a library can face,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, deputy director of intellectual freedom issues for the American Library Association.
Investigators obtained a warrant about eight hours later, but the June 26 standoff in the 105-year-old, red brick library on Main Street frustrated police and had fellow librarians cheering Flint.
“What I observed when I came in were a bunch of very tall men encircling a very small woman,” said the library’s director, Amy Grasmick, who held fast to the need for a warrant after coming to the rescue of the 4-foot-10 Flint.
Library records and patron privacy have been hot topics since the passage of the…