US police investigating a murder have tussled with Amazon over access to data gathered by one of its Echo speakers.
The voice-controlled device was found near to a hot tub where the victim was found dead amid signs of a struggle.
According to court filings, Amazon was issued with two search warrants but refused to share information sent by the smart device to its servers.
However, the police said a detective found a way to extract data from the device itself.
The
accused killer has yet to be put on trial and it is not clear whether
the information ultimately proved useful to the investigation.
Blood spots
Details of the case were first reported by the Information news site.
But
it dates back to November 2015, when the suspect, James Bates, called
the Bentonville, Arkansas police department to say he had found the body
of a friend, Victor Collins, face down in water.
The court
records say one of deceased's eyes and lips appeared to be swollen and
suspected blood spots were found around the rim of the hot tub.
Detectives
say they learned that music had been streamed to the back patio at the
time of death, which they thought might have been controlled via the
Echo's smart assistant Alexa.
The "always on" machine makes recordings of audio it hears from a
fraction of a second before it detects a wake word - either Alexa or
Amazon - until it judges the command to be over.
This audio is then transmitted to Amazon's computer servers, which interpret the request and tell it how to respond.
Although
no recordings are meant to be made at other times, the device often
becomes activated when it misinterprets speech as being its wake
command.
Any captured audio might therefore have identified who
was active in the early hours of the morning when the alleged murder is
thought to have taken place, as well as what was said. Mr Bates claims
to have been asleep at the time.
'Overbroad demands'
The case has echoes of Apple's refusal to help the FBI bypass the security code of an iPhone used by a gunman in 2015.
In that case, the authorities said they were also able to ultimately extract information without the tech firm's co-operation.
"Amazon
will not release customer information without a valid and binding legal
demand properly served on us," a spokesman for the company told the
BBC.
"Amazon objects to overbroad or otherwise inappropriate demands as a matter of course."
He
added that utterances are not stored by Echo devices, and the
associated audio is only accessible via the cloud and can be deleted by
the relevant account holder.
The Bentonville police department said it was also able to extract data from Mr Collins' LG smartphone.
But
it added that it had been unable to access Mr Bates' Huawei Nexus
handset because it had been "encrypted at the chipset level" and was
protected by a passcode lock.
However, the court papers indicate that the property's smart water meter may have yielded the most useful evidence.
The
police say it showed that 140 gallons (636 litres) of water was used
around the time of the alleged killing. They suggest this was down to Mr
Bates using a garden hose to wash away evidence from his porch before
he alerted them to the death.
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