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Impersonating a federal employee, as itself, is not a felony. Otherwise David Duchovny should have been arrested for impersonating an FBI agent in The X-Files and John Ratzenberger for impersonating a postal service employee in Cheers. The law is in 18 U.S. Code sec. 912: Officer or employee of the United States: > Whoever falsely assumes or pretends to be an officer or employee acting under the authority of the United States or any department, agency or officer thereof, and acts as such, or in such pretended character demands or obtains any money, paper, document, or thing of value, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both. That is, 1) impersonating a federal employee, and 2) using that impersonation to get or demand something of value. This account does not have the person actually getting information, nor demanding access, so does not appear to be felonious. For example, suppose it was private citizen X impersonating an FBI agent to test Sell's resolve. The query was "if she'd be willing to install a backdoor into Wickr that would allow the FBI to retrieve information", not if citizen X (impersonating an FBI agent) can get that information. That doesn't seem to be illegal according to the impersonation law. |
If this was done to ascertain information about the company, and their willingness to participate in government surveillance, it is likely to be held "a thing of value" under such precedent (which explicitly holds that things with value in the broader senses of the word count under the statute)
As a pragmatic approach, it is unlikely you are going to be find judges willing to let you slide on this kind of thing :)