“The vote is an excellent step towards maintaining the rule of law,” said John Paterson, cooperating attorney at Bernstein Shur on the Maine case against Verizon. “Voting on a FISA bill that opposes telecom immunity allows the Maine case to go to court, which is precisely where a decision on the legality of the telecoms’ actions should be decided.”
FISA was enacted after the Watergate scandal to provide a court check on government surveillance. In May of 2006, 22 Maine Verizon customers filed a privacy complaint with the Maine Public Utilities Commission. The federal government sued to stop the investigation. That lawsuit is one of dozens of lawsuits against the telephone company that have been consolidated in a single proceeding before a Federal Court in California. Notably, the privacy complaint against Verizon does not contain any request for monetary damages. All of the lawsuits against the telephone companies request a permanent cessation of warrantless surveillance.
“We still have grave concerns about the safeguards for privacy in the House
bill,” said Shenna Bellows, Executive Director of the Maine Civil Liberties
Union. “While I applaud Michaud and Allen for voting to eliminate
immunity, any FISA legislation must contain provisions to protect Americans from
warrantless wiretapping and other invasions of privacy.”