Obama authorizes five more years of warrantless wiretapping
Federal detectives won’t need a warrant to eavesdrop on the emails and phone calls of Americans for another five years. President Obama reauthorized an intelligence gathering bill on Sunday that puts national security over constitutional rights
U.S.
President Barack Obama (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)
RT,
31
December, 2012
President
Barack Obama inked his name over the weekend to an extension of the
FISA Amendments Act of 2008, a George W. Bush-era legislation that
has allowed the government expansive spy powers that has been
considered by some to be dragnet surveillance.
FISA,
or the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, was first signed into
law in the 1970s in order to put into place rules regarding domestic
spying within the United States. Upon the passing of the FAA in 2008,
however, the online and over-the-phone activities of Americans became
subject to sweeping, warrantless wiretapping in instances where
investigators reasonably suspect US citizens to be engaged in
conversation with persons located outside of the country.
Congress
had only up until the end of 2012 to either reauthorize FISA and the
FAA, or let the bill expire. Despite a large grassroots campaign from
privacy advocates and civil liberties organization to ensure the acts
would fade from history, though, the Senate
approved a
five-year extension of the legislation on Friday. Just two days
later, Pres. Obama signed his name to the act, opening up the inboxes
and phone records of US citizens to the federal government until at
least 2018.
Although
on the books since 2008, the FAA has come under increased criticism
this year thanks to efforts from a select group of lawmakers who have
adamantly demanded answers about a program largely considered to be
cloaked in secrecy. In May, Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Mark Udall
(D-CO) sent
a letter to
the National Security Agency asking for an estimate of how many
Americans have been targeted since the FAA went on the books. In
response, Inspector General I. Charles McCullough said honoring that
request would be “beyond
the capacity” of
the office, and that “dedicating
sufficient additional resources would likely impede the NSA’s
mission.”
“If
no one will even estimate how many Americans have had their
communications collected under this law then it is all the more
important that Congress act to close the ‘back door searches’
loophole, to keep the government from searching for Americans’
phone calls and emails without a warrant,” Wyden,
a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, told
Wired.com’s Danger Room.
Although
Americans cannot be specifically targeted under the FAA without
getting the approval of a select panel of FISA judges, the
warrantless monitoring of messages involving anyone outside of the
country can easily collect collateral information about US citizens.
Speaking
on the Senate floor on Friday before the FISA vote, Wyden
warned, “You
can’t just go out checking everybody in sight with the prospect of
that maybe there’s someone who’s done something wrong.”
“Government
officials may only search someone’s house if they have evidence
that someone is breaking the law and they show the evidence to a
judge to get an individual warrant,” he
said.
Despite
attempts from Wyden and others to overturn the FAA, though, it
cleared the Senate by a vote of 73-23 on Friday and was signed by
Pres. Obama in Washington just two days later.
Even
as the FISA renewal was up for debate on Capitol Hill, attempts to
add privacy safeguards that would prevent the collection of personal
data pertaining to US citizens were ignored. Sen. Wyden and others
had asked for amendments to be included to this year’s update, but
all provisions were rejected before the final bill was passed.
Trevor
Timm, an activist with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, writes,
“all the proposed amendments that would have brought a modicum of
transparency and oversight to the government's activities, despite
previous refusals by the Executive branch to even estimate how many
Americans are surveilled by this program or reveal critical secret
court rulings interpreting it.”
“The
common-sense amendments the Senate hastily rejected were modest in
scope and written with the utmost deference to national security
concerns. The Senate had months to consider them, but waited until
four days before the law was to expire to bring them to the floor,
and then used the contrived time crunch to stifle any chances of them
passing.”
In
July 2008, then-Senator Barack Obama voted in favor of the FAA but
said in a statement that it wasn’t an “easy
call”
since the legislation was “far
from perfect.”
In
particular, Obama said he was concerned with a section that provided
retroactive immunity to telecommunication companies that cooperated
with Pres. Bush’s requests for warrantless wiretapping in the wake
of the September 11 terrorist attacks. Sen. Obama said he would work
to remove that provision from the bill if elected president, but
reauthorized it for another five years on Sunday without any comment.
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