The Justice Department said Friday it has withdrawn a request that
sought a court order forcing Apple to assist in opening a locked iPhone
5s linked to a drug case in New York.
According to a court filing, the Justice Department
no longer needs Apple’s assistance in unlocking the device because an
individual provided investigators with the correct passcode Thursday.
This ends months of litigation that has been unfolding in the Eastern
District of New York tied to a locked iPhone 5s running iOS7 that belong
to a convicted drug kingpin.
“As we have said previously, these cases have never
been bout setting a court precedent, they are about law enforcement’s
ability to need and access evidence on devices pursuant to lawful court
orders and search warrants,” Justice Department spokeswoman Emily Pierce
said in statement.
Authorities in October requested that a federal judge
in Brooklyn compel Apple to assist federal authorities in unlocking the
device.
Similar to the recently vacated litigation tied to
the San Bernardino iPhone, the government cited the All Writs Act in its
application. But contrary to the San Bernardino iPhone case, a federal
judge denied the government’s application submitted to the court back in
March.
Pierce said they aren’t revealing the identification
of the individual who gave authorities the passcode, citing an ongoing
investigation.
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