Apple 'Can't Surrender Our Civil Liberties' in Fight Over Shooter's iPhone, Says Former US Solicitor General

Ted Olson defended the tech giant's stance in legal battle with feds.

The iPhone at the center of the legal battle belonged to Syed Farook, who, along with his wife, launched an attack on an office holiday party in December, killing 14 of Farook's coworkers. The couple was killed hours later in a police shootout.

San Bernardino marked the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11.

Prosecutors said Farook's device could be encrypted to the point that its content would be "permanently inaccessible," and, "Apple has the exclusive technical means which would assist the government in completing its search."

Apple must draw a line and adhere to the trust of its users, Olson said, adding the company has a responsibility to maintain the faith of its customers who depend it to protect the privacy of everything from their finances to their health records.

"Terrorists wish to change our lives," Olson said. "We can't surrender our civil liberties and give the terrorists a victory that they actually seek."

In his closing at the ceremony, Olson said, “One very vital place where the challenge of terrorism and the commitment to liberty must particularly be balanced and maintained is right here, in America, in our nation’s capital, in our government and in the agency that is named for one of our cherished ideals: Justice.”

ABC News' Jack Date contributed to this report.