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The Courts

California Prohibited From Enforcing PI Licensing Law Against Anti-Spam Crusader (ij.org) 49

Long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 shared this report from non-profit libertarian law firm, the Institute for Justice: U.S. District Judge Rita Lin has permanently enjoined the California Bureau of Security and Investigative Services from enforcing its private-investigator licensing requirement against anti-spam entrepreneur Jay Fink. The order declares that forcing Jay to get a license to run his business is so irrational that it violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment...

Jay's business stems from California's anti-spam act, which allows individuals to sue spammers. But to sue, they have to first compile evidence. To do that, recipients often have to wade through thousands of emails. For more than a decade, Jay has offered a solution: he and his team will scour a client's junk folder and catalog the messages that likely violate the law. But last summer, Jay's job — and Californians' ability to bring spammers to justice — came to a screeching halt when the state told him he was a criminal. A regulator told Jay he needed a license to read through emails that might be used as evidence in a lawsuit. And because Jay didn't have a private investigator license, the state shut him down.

The state of California has since "agreed to jointly petition the court for an order that forever prohibits it from enforcing its licensure law against Jay," according to the article.

Otherwise the anti-spam crusader would've had to endure thousands of hours of private investigator training...
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California Prohibited From Enforcing PI Licensing Law Against Anti-Spam Crusader

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  • This is clearly a flaw in the legislation, and for the courts to smack it down is clearly them legislating. This should not be!

    • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @11:56AM (#64624749) Homepage Journal

      No, the court is enforcing the Constitution. That is exactly it's mandate.

      • by jhoegl ( 638955 )
        Thats the first part of its job. The second part is to enforce or reduce laws based on their efficacy and relation to the constitution.

        Interpretation is the problem, and everyone interprets things differently. The Supreme court is to finalize that interpretation and thus makes it law interpreted law.

        What does this tell you? If interpretation changes... so can the law.
      • The alternative model in the UK is that the courts are fully constrained by statute law. The recent introduction of the Human Rights Act enabled courts to comment that a piece of legislation contradicted the act, but didn't create the right of the court to strike it down. Both the US and USA are thriving democracies despite this significant difference...

      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        I'm always skeptical when courts strike down or order things on implicit authority. You could call me a hard-core constitutionalist.

        But in this particular case, it seems to be the rare case of government action that is *so* irrational that there is no choice but to strike it.

        Unauthorized Practice of Law (UPL) would be less of a stretch, but the particular agency wouldn't get a chance to flex its muscles for that.

        [OK, the more I think of it, it very well *could* be UPL, if he's giving advice on what is grou

  • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @11:46AM (#64624723)
    California goes overboard when it comes to occupational licensing [youtube.com]. It's hardly surprising that they tried to squeeze this guy. What's surprising is that he actually prevailed in his legal battle.
  • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @11:57AM (#64624755) Homepage Journal

    I'm reminded of when Washington required a full up cosmetologist license for braiding hair. The required course spent more time on dying hair than it did on safety. The most I can see would be teaching braiders how to recognize various hair critters, infections, that sort of thing. Plus keeping their brushes and other tools in the blue antiseptic fluid when not being used. Probably about a day. Not something more equivalent to a semester in college.

    Anyways, private investigators need licensing because they regularly do things that may invade the privacy of others, and thus need to know right where the legal line is because they're brushing against it constantly. But then we're looking at people going out and following others, taking photographs, illicit recordings, etc...

    The described work here is sifting through people's spam boxes. It's going through their mail, with permission. No need for all the other investigative stuff. They're not following people around, they're not going through private records, etc...

    • My first reaction was cosmetology rules for hair braiders and taxi regulation as well.

      But there *is* a difference here.

      In the typical case, it's the entrenched players in the field trying to use the regulations to keep out competition.

      Here, it appears to be recto-cranial inversion on the part of regulators trying to be officious and important.

      I recall my anti-trust professor who explained much of the caselaw and choices of cases as young attorneys at DoJ thinking, "If I can win a case against IBM, there's a

  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @12:17PM (#64624779)

    You have to have a license to use a Raspberry Pi ?

  • Double-edge (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by hdyoung ( 5182939 )
    I’m fine with this. The courts decide that he doesn’t need a PI license? Perfectly fine. Strike a blow for FREEeDDUMMMMm.

    This probably also has liability implications. I would imagine that a licensed, professional PI has some legal protections (as long as they follow the rules) and quite possibly liability insurance. This guy gets none of those. I doubt any insurance company on the planet would sell a liability policy to a random unlicensed schmoe who wants to play at being a for-profit inv
    • Re:Double-edge (Score:5, Informative)

      by Sique ( 173459 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @01:05PM (#64624843) Homepage
      The court has considered exactly this. And because the guy, whose name is Jay Fink, is only looking into mails his customer received and wanted Jay to see, there is no ground for a for-profit-lawyer to sue in the name of the companies sending spam, no invasion of privacy or any other problematic action, because the spam was intended to be seen by the receiver and anyone the receiver sees fit. Basically, Jay does nothing else than helping someone sorting their mail in different files, which does not require any license.
      • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

        Should never be criminal. BUT I could see a judge granting a spammer defense motion to not accept their work as meeting proper evidence standards and excluding it from a case because of lack of a PI license, that's the absolute worst it should be.

        • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
          If that were the case, it would bar individuals from searching their own emails without a PI license. Since that's prima facie absurd, it stands to follow that any individual can designate any other individual the right to search their emails, just as I can ask my friend or relative to search mine without them having to be a PI.
          • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

            Nah, just like you can represent yourself in court, but need permission from the bar to represent others.

    • I very much doubt the PI license protects you in any way from liability. What would protect you is insurance. Anyone in business probably needs to have some type of professional liability insurance. The PI thing seems to not really matter one way or the other as far as that goes. Unless the underwriter wants him to have the PI license. The LLC form provides minimal protection from this type of liability (professional liability).

      The LLC form may protect you from ordinary liability, such as debts owed by th

  • police training (Score:5, Insightful)

    by belmolis ( 702863 ) <billposer@@@alum...mit...edu> on Sunday July 14, 2024 @01:45PM (#64624917) Homepage
    This raises another interesting point in passing. It says a private investigator needs 6,000 hours of training. At eight hours a day, 50 weeks per year, that is three full years. How much training do police receive in criminal investigation? I suspect that it is nowhere near that. To become a regular police officer in California requires completing a 904 hour course at the police academy which covers: Criminal Law, Patrol Procedures, Cultural Diversity, Investigative Procedures, Report Writing, Defensive Tactics, Firearms, Leadership, Ethics, Community Policing, Police Vehicle Operations, Traffic Enforcement, Accident Investigation, Handling Emotional Situations and First Aid/CPR and also includes physical training. Not an awful lot of investigation. To move on to detective takes a minimum of three years on the job and passing an exam. It appears that what a regular police officer learns on the way to becoming a detective is entirely on the job. Of course there are valuable things one can learn that way, some of them not taught in a classroom, but it also means that what topics the officer learns will depend heavily on his or her assignments and luck and that little will be covered systematically. It sounds like the requirements for training of PIs are significantly more rigorous than those for police detectives.
    • So there is an institutional reason why cops routinely break the law when it comes to following the constitution when investigating and possibility arresting suspects. They don't have enough time (and can't be bothered) to learn the law.

      Solely based on watching videos of how cops manipulate and abuse their authority in the field, it's clear that what they learn in on-the-job training is how to be bad cops. Lying, bullying, verbal abuse, unnecessary physical violence are the stock and trade of far to many u

    • Re:police training (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @08:13PM (#64625387)

      The majority of that 6000 hours is probably some sort of experience. Yup, the Internet tells me that all of it is:

      Three years of compensated experience totaling not less than 6,000 hours in investigative work, while employed by law enforcement agencies, collection agencies, insurance agencies, banks, courts, and other private investigation agencies, etc.

      I.e. you need 6000 hours of some kind of vaguely relevant experience before you get to tell your boss to shove it, put your name on the glass in the door and start drinking by yourself waiting for a leggy blonde to stumble into your office.

      Cops don't start out detectives, they never work unsupervised, and they don't do much alone.

      • Interesting that the OP was incorrect in stating that PIs need 6,000 hours of training when it is just experience, but the requirements are still more stringent than for police. The experience required of PIs is all in investigative work, whereas for beginning police officers typically very little of their work is investigative. They typically spend a lot of their time doing traffic enforcement, street patrol, crowd control and the like.
        • Correction: article, not OP.
        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Google also tells me that the LAPD requires a minimum of four years as a patrol officer before you can be considered for detective. Patrol officers get six months of academy training plus a year as probationary officers with on the job training. After that apparently you're still probationary and under the direct supervision of a training officer until you get your next promotion. Then you're under the supervision of a sergeant, etc.

          I suspect a licensed PI is probably not actually drinking alone in his offi

  • Why did Calif do this? You think that bureaucrats who like nothing better than sitting on their butts sought out this guy? Someone obviously complained, someone with clout. Like someone who was on the potential losing end of a spam lawsuit.

    • Not necessarily. There might have been a complaint from a PI or an organization of PIs, intent on preserving their monopoly. Or the Board itself might have initiated the process. Boards regulating licensed occupations are often very protective of the privileges of licensees.
  • How many bad bureaucratic decisions don't get overturned because the legal costs are too burdensome to fight it?

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Sunday July 14, 2024 @11:39PM (#64625607) Journal
    Seriously, CA is one messed up place. And dems think that either Harris or Newsom are best bet to beat Trump. What idiots.
  • And as a domain owner, you wouldn't even believe how much spam ends in the "catchall" mailbox, most of which are addressed to made-up addresses.

  • ...would be to find out who "suggested" to the state official that they investigate this guy and squeeze him out of what he was doing, and how much they donated to that officials pocket.

    Maybe someone should hire an investigator.

  • This is largely orthogonal to the larger argument here in this article on the job classification requirements and whatnot, but if this guy is really trying to crusade against spam it would be interesting to know if he has accomplished anything at all.

    The vast overwhelming majority of all spam originates outside the US. Suing those people is as useful as yelling at a river to run in the other direction. US-borne spam is so highly obfuscated that even finding a liable party to sue is almost pointless.

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