Compelled Decryption
Because it is difficult and sometimes impossible for the government to decrypt data encrypted on devices seized during criminal investigations, the government has sometimes sought to compel (apparent) device owners to unlock the devices themselves. This raises important Fifth Amendment questions. There is still no consensus in the courts, with the divided rules that have emerged so far sometimes hinging on the precise order the government has sought: an order requiring a suspect to unlock the device using a biometric, to unlock the device with a PIN or password, or to disclose the PIN or password to the government. Which, if any, of these paths are constitutional? Do technical advances in forensics render the question moot? For this debate, one side should argue that any kind of compelled decryption (compelled unlocking with a biometric, unlocking with a password, or disclosure of the password) is unconstitutional and bad policy. The other side should argue that at least one form of compelled decryption is constitutional and good policy.
Resolved: that law enforcement should be permitted to compel criminal suspects to decrypt or otherwise provide access to encrypted hard drives.
The standard debate policies and format apply.