End the N.S.A. Dragnet, Now
By RON WYDEN, MARK UDALL and MARTIN HEINRICH
Published: November 25, 2013
WASHINGTON — THE framers of the Constitution declared that government
officials had no power to seize the records of individual Americans
without evidence of wrongdoing, and they embedded this principle in the
Fourth Amendment. The bulk collection of Americans’ telephone records —
so-called metadata — by the National Security Agency is, in our view, a
clear case of a general warrant that violates the spirit of the framers’
intentions. This intrusive program was authorized under a secret legal
process by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, so for years
American citizens did not have the knowledge needed to challenge the
infringement of their privacy rights.
Our first priority is to keep Americans safe from the threat of
terrorism. If government agencies identify a suspected terrorist, they
should absolutely go to the relevant phone companies to get that
person’s phone records. But this can be done without collecting the
records of millions of law-abiding Americans. We recall Benjamin
Franklin’s famous admonition that those who would give up essential
liberty in the pursuit of temporary safety will lose both and deserve
neither.
The usefulness of the bulk collection program has been greatly
exaggerated. We have yet to see any proof that it provides real, unique
value in protecting national security. In spite of our repeated
requests, the N.S.A. has not provided evidence of any instance when the
agency used this program to review phone records that could not have
been obtained using a regular court order or emergency authorization.
Despite this, the surveillance reform bill recently ratified by the
Senate Intelligence Committee would explicitly permit the government to
engage in dragnet collection as long as there were rules about when
officials could look at these phone records. It would also give
intelligence agencies wide latitude to conduct warrantless searches for
Americans’ phone calls and emails.
This is not the true reform that poll after poll has shown the American
people want. It is preserving business as usual. When the Bill of Rights
was adopted, it established that Americans’ papers and effects should
be seized only when there was specific evidence of suspicious activity.
It did not permit government agencies to issue general warrants as long
as records seized were reviewed with the permission of senior officials.
Congress has a crucial opportunity to reassert constitutionally
guaranteed liberties by reforming the N.S.A.’s overbroad collection of
Americans’ personal data. But the Intelligence Committee bill squanders
this chance. It would enable some of the most constitutionally
questionable surveillance activities now exposed to the public eye. The
Senate should be reining in these programs, not giving them a stamp of
approval.
As members of the Intelligence Committee, we strongly disagree with this
approach. We had already proposed our own, bipartisan surveillance
reform legislation, the Intelligence Oversight and Surveillance Reform
Act, which we have sponsored with a number of other senators. Our bill
would prohibit the government from conducting warrantless “backdoor
searches” of Americans’ communications — including emails, text messages
and Internet use — under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act. It would also create a “constitutional advocate” to
present an opposing view when the F.I.S.C. is considering major
questions of law or constitutional interpretation.
Rather than adopt our legislation, the Intelligence Committee chose to
codify excessively broad domestic surveillance authorities. So we
offered amendments: One would end the bulk collection of Americans’
records, but still allow intelligence agencies to obtain information
they legitimately needed for national security purposes by getting the
approval of a judge, which could even be done after the fact in
emergency situations. Another of our amendments sought to prevent the
N.S.A. from collecting Americans’ cellphone location information in bulk
— a capability that potentially turns the cellphone of every man, woman
and child in America into a tracking device.
Each of these proposals represents real and meaningful reform, which we
believe would have fulfilled the purpose of protecting our security and
liberty. Each was rejected by the committee, in some cases by a single
vote.
But we will continue to engage with our colleagues and seek to advance
the reforms that the American people want and deserve. As part of this
effort, we will push to hold a comprehensive reform debate on the Senate
floor.
There is no question that our nation’s intelligence professionals are
dedicated, patriotic men and women who make real sacrifices to help keep
our country safe and free. We believe that they should be able to do
their jobs secure in the knowledge that their agencies have the
confidence of the American people.
But this trust has been undermined by the N.S.A.’s domestic surveillance
programs, as well as by senior officials’ misleading statements about
surveillance. Only by ending the dragnet collection of ordinary
Americans’ private information can this trust be rebuilt.
Congress needs to preserve the agencies’ ability to collect information
that is actually necessary to guard against threats to our security. But
it also needs to preserve the right of citizens to be free from
unwarranted interference in their lives, which the framers understood
was vital to American liberties.
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