Obama
administration drowning in lawsuits filed over NSA surveillance
Attorneys
for the Electronic Frontier Foundation have sued the Obama
administration and are demanding the White House stop the dragnet
surveillance programs operated by the National Security Agency.
RT,
16
July, 2013
Both
the White House and Congress have weighed in on the case of Edward
Snowden and the revelations he’s made by leaking National Security
Agency documents. Now the courts are having their turn to opine, and
with opportunities aplenty.
Day
by day, new lawsuits waged against the United States government are
being filed in federal court, and with the same regularity President
Barack Obama and the preceding administration are being charged with
vast constitutional violations alleged to have occurred through the
NSA spy programs exposed by Mr. Snowden.
The
recent disclosures made by Snowden have generated commotion in
Congress and the White House alike. The Department of Justice has
asked for the 30-year-old former Booz Allen Hamilton worker to be
extradited to the US to face charges of espionage, and members of
both the House and Senate have already held their share of emergency
hearings in the wake of Snowden’s series of disclosures detailing
the vast surveillance programs waged by the US in utmost secrecy. But
with the executive and legislative branches left worrying about how
to handle the source of the leaks — and if the policies publicized
should have existed in the first place — the courts could soon
settle some disputes that stand to shape the way the US conducts
surveillance of its own citizens.
Both
longstanding arguments and just-filed claims have garnered the
attention of the judicial branch in the weeks since the Guardian
newspaper first began publishing leaked NSA documents attributed to
Snowden on June 6. But while the courts have relied previously on
stalling or stifling cases that challenge Uncle Sam’s spy efforts,
civil liberties experts say the time may be near for some highly
anticipated arguments to finally be heard. Now on the heels of
lawsuits filed by the likes of the American Civil Liberties Union and
the Electronic Privacy Information Center, groups are coming out of
the woodwork to wage a legal battle against the White House.
The
most recent example came this week when a coalition of various
organizations filed suit together against the Obama administration by
challenging “an illegal and
unconstitutional program of dragnet electronic surveillance,
specifically the bulk acquisition, collection, storage, retention and
searching of telephone communications information.”
Represented by attorneys from the EFF and others, the plaintiffs in
the latest case filed Tuesday in San Francisco federal court include
an array of groups, such as: First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles;
Bill of Rights Defense Committee; Calguns Foundation; California
Association of Federal Firearms Licensees; Council on Islamic
Relations; Franklin Armory; Free Press; Free Software Foundation;
Greenpeace; Human Rights Watch; Media Alliance; National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws; Open Technology Institute; People
for the American Way, Public Knowledge; Students for Sensible Drug
Policy; TechFreedom; and Unitarian Universalist Service Committee.
Cindy
Cohn, the legal director of the EFF, told the Washington Post that
the NSA leaks credited to Snowden have been a “tremendous
boon”
to the plaintiffs in recently filed court cases challenging the
surveillance state. The courts are currently pondering at least five
important cases, Cohn told the Post, which could for once and for all
bring some other issues up for discussion.
Since
June 6, the American
Civil Liberties Union,
a Verizon Wireless customer and the founder of conservative group
Judicial Watch have all filed federal lawsuits against the
government’s collection of telephony metadata, a practice that puts
basic call records into the government’s hands without a specific
warrant ever required and reported to the media by Mr. Snowden. Larry
Klayman of Judicial Watch has also sued over another revelation made
by Snowden — the PRISM Internet eavesdropping program — and the
Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC, has asked the Supreme
Court to vacate
the order
compelling Verizon Business Network Services to send metadata to the
feds.
Electronic
Frontier Foundation`s logo
Perhaps
most important, however, is a California federal court’s recent
decision to shutdown
the government’s request to stop the case of Jewel
vs. NSA
from proceeding. That debate first began in 2008 when Jewel, a former
AT&T customer, challenged the government’s "illegal
and unconstitutional program of dragnet communications surveillance”
as exposed by a whistleblower at the telecom company. That case has
seen roadblock after roadblock during the last five years, but all
that changed earlier this month. The government long argued
that Jewel
v. NSA
can’t go up for discussion because the issues at hand are
privileged as ‘state secrets’ and can’t be brought into the
public realm.
“[T]he
disclosure of sensitive intelligence sources and methods . . .
reasonably could be expected to cause exceptionally grave harm to
national security,”
the government wrote in one earlier
filing.
"The
very purpose of these cases is to put at issue whether the NSA
undertook certain alleged activities under presidential authorization
after 9/11, and whether those activities continue today. At every
stage, from standing to the merits, highly classified and properly
privileged intelligence sources and methods are at risk of
disclosure. The law is clear, however, that where litigation risks or
requires the disclosure of information that reasonably could be
expected to harm national security, dismissal is required."
Following
Snowden’s recent disclosures, though, Judge Jeffrey White of the
Northern District of California ruled on July 8 that there’s a way
for those cases to still be heard.
"The
court rightly found that the traditional legal system can determine
the legality of the mass, dragnet surveillance of innocent Americans
and rejected the government's invocation of the state secrets
privilege to have the case dismissed,"
the EFF’s Cohn, who is working on the case, said in a statement
issued at the time of the ruling. "Over
the last month, we came face-to-face with new details of mass,
untargeted collection of phone and Internet records, substantially
confirmed by the Director of National Intelligence. Today's decision
sets the stage for finally getting a ruling that can stop the dragnet
surveillance and restore Americans' constitutional rights."
Sen.
Ron Wyden (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images / AFP)
Weighing
in weeks later to the Post, Cohn said that outcome could have more of
an impact than many might imagine. “It’s
tremendous, because anything that allows these cases to proceed is
important,”
she said.
Speaking
to the New York Times this week, American Civil Liberties Union
attorney Jameel Jaffer said that until now the government has
operated a “shell game”
to shield it’s surveillance programs from litigation. “[T]he
statute has been shielded from judicial review, and controversial and
far-reaching surveillance authorities have been placed beyond the
reach of the Constitution,”
he said.
Should
Cohn’s prediction come true, though, the courts could decide to
weigh in and reshape the way the government currently conducts
surveillance.
According
to University of Pittsburgh law professor Jules Lobel, a victory
there could come in more than one way. “There
is a broader function to these lawsuits than simply winning in
court,”
he told the Post. “The
government has to respond, and forcing them to go before a court
might make them want to change aspects of the programs.”
“The
government does things to avoid embarrassment,’’
he added, “and lawsuits are
a key pressure point.’’
Interviews
to the Post and the Times come just days after Sen. Ron Wyden
(D-Oregon), a long-time member of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
said
he thought the revelations made by Snowden may influence the White
House to reconsider their surveillance practices before the courts
can even have their chance.
“I
have a feeling that the administration is getting concerned about the
bulk phone records collection, and that they are thinking about
whether to move administratively to stop it,”
Sen. Wyden told the Times.
“I
think we are making a comeback,”
he said.
Yahoo
wins lawsuit to declassify docs proving resistance to PRISM
Search
engine Yahoo has won a court case to release NSA records and
potentially prove it resisted handing over customer data to US
authorities. The ruling could clear Yahoo’s name following
allegations it collaborated with the NSA to spy on citizens.
RT,
16
July, 2013
The
US Foreign Intelligence and Surveillance Court ruled that data,
pertaining to a 2008 order for Yahoo to hand over customer
information to US authorities, should be revealed.
"The
Government shall conduct a declassification review of this Court's
Memorandum Opinion of [Yahoo's case] and the legal briefs submitted
by the parties to this Court," the ruling read.
Through
the ruling the Internet search engine seeks to prove that it did not
collaborate with the NSA in its Prism spy program.
Classified
documents leaked by former CIA employee Edward Snowden revealed that
the NSA gathered supposedly private user information from the data
banks of as Yahoo, Facebook Inc., Microsoft Corp., Google Inc. and
others. All of the organizations have denied being in cahoots with US
authorities and maintain the NSA gleaned the information without
their knowledge.
“Yahoo! takes users’ privacy very seriously. We do not provide the government with direct access to our servers, systems, or network,” said a company spokesperson back in June when Edward Snowden went public with the NSA leaks.
The
company filed a request to the US Foreign Intelligence and
Surveillance Court on June 14 to make the 2008 case public. Yahoo
says it means to help inform the public in the ongoing debate over
the US government’s sweeping spy programs.
US
authorities have not expressed any opinion over the data that is to
be disclosed but has asked that they be given two week to review the
information before its release.
Staff
attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), Mark Rumold,
expressed doubts over the government’s transparency.
"It
remains to be seen how forthcoming (the government) will be. The
administration has said they want a debate about the propriety of the
surveillance, but they haven't really provided information to inform
that debate. So declassifying these opinions is a very important
place to start," Rumold told AP.
EFF
also noted in a statement that more companies could have made
requests to the court and the Yahoo request had a gag order on it.
“We encourage every company that has opposed a FISA order or directive to move to unseal their oppositions so the public will have a better understanding of how they've fought for their users,” said the company.
Washington
has come under fire for its sweeping surveillance programs, provoking
the ire of civil rights groups. The Obama Administration justifies
the covert gathering of meta-data as a measure against terrorism.
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