Subpoena Watch: Will the White House Answer Congress' Demands?
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In June the Senate issued subpoenas to the White House, Vice President and the Justice Department for documents related to warrantless surveillance. Make a DifferenceYour support helps the ACLU stand up for human rights and defend civil liberties. Update: October 16, 2007 - Today, after months of ignoring congressional subpoenas, the Bush administration submitted selected documents on domestic spying to the Senate Intelligence Committee. Even though an entirely different Senate Committee — the Senate Judiciary Committee — still has outstanding subpoenas for a full and public airing of that information. The Judiciary Committee has been waiting for months, watching deadline after deadline pass as the administration, like a deadbeat tenant, keeps promising results and never delivering. We're not sure exactly what documents were given to the Intelligence Committee, but we definitely know they were used to broker a deal on immunity for the telecoms who participated in warrantless and illegal wiretapping. Stay tuned as we watch this fight unfold in the Senate and wait for the administration to finally come clean. (Learn more >>) The ACLU is calling on Leahy and Congress to hold the White House in contempt when business resumes in September. Meanwhile, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has told the White House to reply to the ACLU's unprecedented filing requesting secret court orders discussing the scope of the government's authority to engage in secret wiretapping of Americans. These documents are key to the debate over the Bush NSA spy program and the recent cave-in vote by Congress that gutted the power of the FISA court. The government has until August 31 to reply. Learn more about the subpoenas >> |
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It's been a year and a half since we first found out that our own government has been tapping our phones and reading our emails. In that year and a half, the Senate Judiciary Committee has asked the Bush Administration nine times for information about the NSA's illegal spying.
The administration continues to put up roadblocks between its unconstitutional program and the American people. It is now do-or-die time for the separation of powers. Congress is facing a historic moment when it can fight for its rightful place in our Constitutional structure or accept the president's continued and sweeping claims of unquestionable authority and just get swept under the rug. The question is: So what is Congress going to do? > News: ACLU Calls Hand Over of Spy Documents Self-Serving |
















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