While this may seem like a simple case, the suspect is dead, and they are looking for loose ends and leads for conspirators, it's not a path we want to take.
If apple does this once, just once, then the precedent is set to keep doing it. This is a pandora's box scenario.
First off, the tech. They can't (supposedly) do it right now. They would have to engineer a solution to break their own security. That itself is a bad idea. Companies get hacked, all the time. If this security crack got loose, it would destroy their entire business model, or at least a good portion of it. Every other phone out there that would be accessible by this crack would be vulnerable to hacking.
Then there's the precedent of it. If they did it in this one case, then what's stopping the government from 'forcing' them to do it again? Nothing. And in fact, we all know it will happen.
I'll paraphrase Franklin here. Those would give up some freedom for a little security, deserve neither freedom nor security.
__________________
Luck is a residue of Design.
|