No matter what Obama wants and the Senate does, the гsurveillance state is not going away. The NSA is the Hidden State and very probably has the power to (if it has not already) to blackmail anyone in power.
USA Freedom Act vs expired Patriot Act provisions: How do the spy laws differ?
USA Freedom Act vs expired Patriot Act provisions: How do the spy laws differ?
RT,
1
June, 2015
The
US Senate is poised to pass the USA Freedom Act now that major
surveillance powers vested in the USA Patriot Act have expired. The
House-passed bill, representing a slightly less intrusive spying law,
will come to a vote on Tuesday.
The
Senate let certain parts of the USA Patriot Act lapse, failing to
extend then by the June 1 deadline. Among them is the notorious
Section 215, authorizing bulk collection of Americans’ telephone
data, which a federal court ruled
illegal earlier
this month. According to government officials, it has been used
almost 200 times per year. Other provisions that expired enable the
government to conduct“roving
wiretaps” of
suspects who switch communication devices, or spy on “lone
wolf” individuals
who are not affiliated with an international terrorism organization.
The
National Security Agency used Section 215 of the Patriot Act as the
basis for collecting vast troves of phone records of Americans, who
weren’t necessarily under official investigation. It was also used
to track financial data and to obtain companies' internet business
records. The extent of the mass surveillance program was revealed
nearly two years ago by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
Now, the Senate
will address a so-called reform bill pushed by opponents of the
expiring Patriot Act provisions. The USA Freedom Act, passed by
the House in a 338-88 vote on May 13.
Supporters
of the USA
Freedom Act in
the Senate say they are hopeful that the bill will pass this week.
"This
is a good day for the American people,"said Sen.
Mike Lee, a Republican sponsor of the USA Freedom Act. "I
do believe we have the votes. The question is not whether we will get
this passed, but when."
The
bill, however, would require phone companies to maintain phone
records that the government could later search. The legislation also
includes provisions for “roving
wiretaps” and “lone
wolf”surveillance
demanded by the FBI and the US Department of Justice.
“This
is the only realistic way forward,” Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Sunday
of the USA Freedom Act. McConnell had fought to revive the expiring
Patriot Act provisions but was thwarted, in part, by opposition
led by Sen.
Rand Paul.
The “Uniting
and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism” (USA
PATRIOT) Act was adopted in October 2001, six weeks after the 9/11
terror attacks. Its most recent extension was in 2011.
The
law allowed US intelligence agencies to amass bulk collections of
various business records that were deemed "relevant" to
a national security investigation. Yet, a US Department of Justice
Inspector General report released in late May revealed that
the FBI “did
not identify any major case developments that resulted from use of
the records obtained in response to Section 215 orders.” That
finding was echoed by both the Obama administration's
own Presidential
Review Group and
the independent Privacy
and Civil Liberties Oversight Board.
Reminder that Obama's #NSA review board found that Patriot Act's Sec 215 was "not essential to preventing attacks" pic.twitter.com/ZbgCvo3Sks
— Raf Sanchez (@rafsanchez) June 1, 2015
The
law's critics, such as Senator Paul, say the Patriot Act's
surveillance powers amounted to a deep government intrusion into the
lives of innocent Americans.
The
USA Freedom Act would move the responsibility of holding phone
records to private companies. Intelligence agencies like the NSA
would then ask the companies for specific data on an individual
allegedly connected to a terror group or foreign nation.
The
Act also requires heightened transparency measures associated with
government data searches, and it would allow tech companies to be
more forthcoming regarding how many times they are tapped for data by
government agencies. The bill also offers more access to case
opinions made by judges of the secretive Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, which has oversight over surveillance of suspects
overseas.
The
bill was first introduced in 2013 after whistleblower Edward
Snowden's leaks revealed the Section 215-fueled bulk phone metadata
collection program.
Many
in opposition to the Patriot Act say the USA Freedom Act is not a
meaningful check on government spying capabilities. A leading critic
of government surveillance in the US House, Rep.Justin Amash
(R-Mich.) described the Freedom Act as a “step
in the wrong direction by specifically authorizing such collection in
violation of the Fourth Amendment.”
Others
have pointed out that the USA Freedom Act will not address other
surveillance powers the government can employ. Should the Senate
approve the reform bill, “it’ll
be suspicionless spying as usual until the next big surveillance
provision, section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act sunsets at the end
of 2017," said Jennifer
Granick, director of Civil Liberties at the Stanford Center for
Internet and Society.
Edward
Snowden revealed the government uses Section 702 of the FISA
Amendments Act to authorize digital surveillance on foreign persons,
which, tech experts say has involved exploiting security weaknesses
on behalf of the government and, as a result, secretly undermining
the protocols meant to protect online activity.
“Section
702 of the FISA Amendments Act conceals some of the worst mass
surveillance operations,”he said recently. “In
basic terms, the government here prefers to ignore that the 4th
Amendment prohibits not just the unwarranted search of private
records, but also the initial seizure of them as well. I suspect
that's likely to haunt not only them, but all of us as well.”
Snowden
also pointed to Executive Order 12333, signed by President Ronald
Reagan in 1981, which requires government agencies to comply with
data requests made by the CIA. He said the order, which has been used
to justify the collection of unencrypted material, is a “skeleton
in the closet,” but
that changing it will be difficult “because
the White House argues these operations are simply above the law and
cannot be regulated by congress or the courts.”
Several
civil liberties advocates are strictly opposing the USA Freedom Act
because it does not go far enough in curbing unchecked surveillance.
"The
sacrifices made by the USA FREEDOM Act of 2015 are
unacceptable," wrote several
groups and intelligence community whistleblowers in a letter urging a
vote against the reform bill.
"The
modest changes within this bill, in turn, fail to reform mass
surveillance, of Americans and others, conducted under Section 702 of
the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 and Executive Order 12333. Given
intelligence agencies’ eagerness to subvert any attempts by
Congress to rein in massive surveillance programs by changing the
legal authorities under which they operate, the modest, proposed
changes are no reform at all."
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