The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals will hear Microsoft's challenge to a July 2014 lower court ruling concluding that a court or law enforcement agency in the United States is empowered to order a person or entity to produce materials, even if the information is housed outside the country.
The Redmond, Washington-based company hopes the appeals court will overturn the decision upholding the US government's right to search a consumer email account that Microsoft stores in Dublin, Ireland. The government wants to search the account as part of a narcotics investigation.
In court papers, Microsoft calls on Congress to "grapple with the question whether, and when, law enforcement should be able to compel providers like Microsoft to help it seize customer emails stored in foreign countries."
"Only Congress has the institutional competence and constitutional authority to balance law enforcement needs against our nation's sovereignty, the privacy of its citizens and the competitiveness of its industry," it said.
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"The fact remains that there exists probable cause to believe that evidence of a violation of US criminal law, affecting US residents and implicating US interests, is present in records under Microsoft's control," they wrote.
"With the benefits of corporate citizenship in the United States come corresponding responsibilities, including the responsibility to comply with a disclosure order issued by a US court. Microsoft should not be heard to complain that doing so might harm its bottom line."