IT'S
A SECRET: YOU WILL NEVER KNOW IF YOU ARE IN DANGER. A SECRET COURT
MAKES A SECRET RULING AND IT IS A SECRET YOU WILL NEVER KNOW.
Hiding behind the excuse of "National Security" Obama warns making secret court's ruling public could mean 'grave danger'
"In a bid to avoid revealing the details of a secret ruling on domestic
surveillance, the White House has warned a federal judge that making the decision public could do “exceptionally grave and serious damage to the national security” of the country."
From the story, linked below:
In a bid to avoid revealing the details of a secret ruling on domestic
surveillance, the White House has warned a federal judge that making the
decision public could do “exceptionally grave and serious damage to the
national security” of the country.
The grim advice comes after
the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) sued the US Department of
Justice for details of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court ruling
that determined that the federal government violated the 2008 FISA
Amendment Act.
The FISA Amendment, which was the expansion of a
pre-existing law under the George W. Bush administration, made it legal
for the government to conduct widespread foreign and domestic email and
phone surveillance without probable cause. Included is the provision
that the National Security Administration (NSA) may monitor any citizen
suspected of conversing with someone outside the United States.
The Obama White House extended the provision for another five years in December of 2012.
Using the Freedom of Information Act, the EFF hoped to force the
government into making public the details of the court’s secret ruling.
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court proceedings and the records
kept of the hearings are kept off limits from the public because the
court rules on warrant requests for suspected foreign intelligence
agents operating inside the US. Only federal government officials are on
hand and, unlike a public or civil trial, a prosecutor doesn't face off
against a defense. Instead, evidence is shown and a ruling follows.
The EFF’s initial request was denied because releasing the court
transcript would, the government said, “implicate classified
intelligence sources and methods.” Senator Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), who is
known for his outspoken criticism of domestic surveillance, was briefed
on the court’s opinion and authorized to reveal that the federal
government’s actions “circumvented the spirit of the law” and was
“unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment,” as quoted by Wired Magazine.
Wyden has been a vocal opponent of the expansion of the FISA Amendment,
which has also been criticized by the ACLU. He was one of the few
Senators to vote against continuing President Bush’s expansions in 2012,
comparing the vague language and broad enforcement allowances to the
method British soldiers used to make their way through colonists’ homes
before the American Revolution.
“It is never okay, never okay
for government officials to use a general warrant to deliberately invade
the privacy of a law-abiding American,” he told reporters in December
2012 “It wasn’t okay for constables and customs officials do it in
colonial days, and it’s not okay for the National Security Agency to do
it today.”
In 2008 then-Senator Obama initially opposed the
FISA expansion before eventually voting in step with President Bush,
saying the new provisions were necessary to fight terrorism.
In February of this year the Supreme Court declined to hear a civilian challenge to the law.
The HiV of Western Culture
4 years ago
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