Will
this go the same way as the NDAA indefinite detention provisions?
Supreme
Court to rule on legality of wiretapping through FISA
The
fight to stop the government's sweeping surveillance of emails and
phone calls will go all the way to the Supreme Court. The ACLU has
filed a lawsuit challenging the warrantless wiretapping provisions
included under the FISA Amendment Acts.
RT,
19
September, 2012
The
US House of Representative voted last week to reauthorize the 2008
amendments added to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or
FISA, that allow for blanketing surveillance and eavesdropping of any
communication suspected to be sent outside of the United States.
Under the FISA Amendment Act (FAA), the government is granted the
power to peer into the inboxes of any American and listen in on
long-distance calls without ever requiring a judge’s approval.
Pending approval from the Senate, the FAA will be renewed this year
and be left on the books for another five years. The American Civil
Liberties Union is adamantly opposed, however, and has asked the
highest court in America to intervene.
On
Monday, attorneys with the ACLU filed a brief (.pdf) with the Supreme
Court challenging FISA and the FAA in hopes of keeping the feds from
further snooping on message assumed to be private but made open to
the National Security Agency with little oversight into their
endeavors. The claim was filed on behalf of plaintiffs composed of
human rights activists, attorneys, journalists and others opposed to
the act “whose work requires them to engage in sensitive and
sometimes privileged telephone and e-mail communications with people
located outside the U.S,” the ACLU explains.
“Under
the FAA, the government can target anyone — human rights
researchers, academics, attorneys, political activists, journalists —
simply because they are foreigners outside the United States, and in
the course of its surveillance it can collect Americans’
communications with those individuals,” the ACLU writes in the
brief.
Despite
being allowing already for extensive, dragnet surveillance power, the
ACLU notes in their suit that “the FAA dispenses with the
requirement that the government specify the facilities to be
monitored,” allowing the number of Americans to be targeted,
purposely or not, to be infinite. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) asked the
NSA to provide Congress with a number of Americans targeted under the
FAA earlier this year, only to be told that informing him of as much
would “violate the privacy” of the Americans already targeted.
“This
means that the government does not need to seek FISA Court approval
for each of the phone numbers of email addresses at which its
surveillance is directed,” the ACLU claims, adding that
surveillance can be aimed at “categories of phones numbers and
email address or even gateway switches through which millions of
Americans’ communications flow.”
“Rather
than target its surveillance power at a specific person thought to be
the agent of a foreign power, the government can target its
surveillance power at a group of people, a neighborhood, a country or
a geographic region,” it continues. As a result, the ACLU has
reason to believe that their clients can be routinely watched.
“Some
plaintiffs communicate with people who have been the targets of
surveillance or other US government attention in the past,” the
brief reads. Journalist Naomi Klein, for example, communicates with
indigenous rights advocates in Columbia who may discuss issues
relating to America’s involvement in that country’s government.
Joanne Mariner, the Terrorism and Counterterrorism Program Director
at Human Rights Watch, regularly corresponds with former CIA
detainees for her job, and attorney Sylvia Royce is required to
communicate with experts in Europe about the cases of persons kept
locked up in US military prisons.
The
ACLU notes that an appeals court panel agreed in 2011 that
“plaintiffs have good reason to believe that their communications,
in particular, will fall within the scope of the broad surveillance
that they can assume the government will conduct,” and the full
body of U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit later refused
the government’s attempts to have them reconsider.
“But
instead of allowing the case to be heard on the merits, the Obama
administration asked the Supreme Court to review the case,” the
ACLU’s Ateqah Khaki, writes. “Our brief urges the Court to affirm
the appeals court’s decision.”
When
the House voted to extend the FAA last week, the majority of
testimonies delivered favoring the reauthorizing revolved around the
alleged necessity of the act for counterterrorism purposes. Rep.
Lamar Smith (R-Texas) sponsored the bill and said, “We have a duty
to ensure the intelligence community can gather the intelligence they
need to protect our country.”
“Foreign
nations continue to spy on America to plot cyber-attacks and attempt
to steal sensitive information from our military and private sector
industries,” and that Congress has “a solemn responsibility to
ensure that the intelligence community can gather the information,”
Rep. Smith said.
His
opponents argued that the intel gathering allowed under the FAA was
detrimental to civil liberties, however, and has put the
communications of each and every American at risk.
“Everyone
becomes suspect when big brother is listening,” Rep. Dennis
Kucinich (D-Ohio) argued on the Hill.
In
a separate case, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has sued the
Obama administration for failing to adhere to a Freedom of
Information Act request for information on the FAA. The ACLU reports
that oral arguments in front of the Supreme Court regarding this
week’s brief are slated to begin October 29.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.