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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">t get our
cell provider at the time to release that information, Missey Smith told
FoxNews.com. This is not an issue of privacy. Its not a matter
of content were not asking for text messages or information about
who the person is contacting. Were simply asking for the location of
the phone.This law costs zero to implement, she added. And it absolutely
saves lives.Such was the case in Loudon County, Tenn., in May 2012,
one month after the governor signed the bill into law. Local authorities
there were able to quickly obtain cellphone records from Verizon leading
them to a suspected child rapist who was believed to have snatched
a child."They had reason to believe the child was in imminent danger,
and we were able to use the Kelsey Smith Act to obtain
the location of the suspects cellphone without having to go through a
court order process," said Jennifer Estes, president of the Tennessee Emergency
Number Association.In most cases, victims of abductions by strangers are
killed within a very narrow window of time -- making it imperative
for law enforcement to obtain cellphone records quickly."Time is of the
essence when a child is missing -- the first 3 hours are
critical to recovering a child alive," John Ryan, chief executive officer
of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, said in an
email to FoxNews.com. "Law enforcement must be able to obtain cellphone
locations as quickly as possible in these circumstances. We supp
want a requirement that industry scrub any
data of personal information before giving it to the government -- a
stipulation that Rogers and business groups say would be too onerous and
deter industry participation.Rogers, who co-sponsored the bill with Rep.
Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., the panel's top Democrat, said they altered
the bill to address other concerns by privacy groups raised last year.
But a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, Michelle Richardson,
said the bill is still objectionable because it could allow the military
to review data on private commercial networks."A couple of cosmetic changes
is not enough to address the concerns of members" in the Senate,
Richardson said.Rogers says the political calculus has changed and that
China's hacking campaign was too brazen for the White House to justify
the status quo."There's a line around the Capitol building of companies
willing to come in and tell us in a classified setting (that)
`my whole intellectual property portfolio is gone,"' Rogers said. "I've
never seen anything like this, where we aren't jazzed and our blood
pressure isn't up."In February, Obama signed an executive order that would
help develop voluntary industry standards for protecting networks. But the
White House and Congress agreed that legislation was still needed to address
the legal liability companies face if they share threat information. Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., promised at the
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