ACLU Condemns Administration Circumvention of Spy Judge (8/2/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON–
Following reports that a judge overruled the Bush Administration’s
wiretapping procedures, the American Civil Liberties Union today slammed the
White House for attempting to rush new domestic spying legislation through
Congress this week. The alleged
ruling by a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court judge against a “basket
warrant” led the administration to begin fiercely lobbying Congress to make
sweeping changes to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) before
Congress recesses.
"A campaign of fear and misinformation has
spread on Capitol Hill that needs to be stopped," said Anthony D. Romero,
Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union. "When a judge rules against the
government, we shouldn't just rush to change the law. We can't allow an administration that breaks the laws to simply
bully lawmakers into rewriting them.
Congress must stop caving in and start standing up to this
administration."
For months, the Bush
administration has been shopping its proposed FISA changes around Congress. Director of National Intelligence, Mike
McConnell, has been heavily involved in the lobbying for gutting FISA. Late last
night, Senators Christopher Bond (R-MO) and Mitch McConnell (R-KY) introduced
legislation that is very similar to the administration’s proposal. The senators’ bill would permit the
wiretapping of Americans without warrants and without judicial review. Its proposed changes are sweeping. As long as the National Security Agency
targets someone overseas, whether that person is sending or receiving
information via the phone or email, the communications of Americans on the other
end will be caught up in the surveillance dragnet.
Also yesterday, Chairman
of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Senator John D. Rockefeller
(D-WV), released his plan for an interim FISA fix. His proposal would also allow mass
collection of Americans’ communications, would permit the vast amount of data to
be subsequently datamined. This
would bury any useful intelligence and would guarantee the collection and
retention of countless phone calls and emails in the event that one party is
within the United States. In
addition, Senator Rockefeller proposes a sunset provision to re-examine the
changes in six months. The Patriot
Act reauthorization debacle makes clear that sunsets are a bad idea.
“This administration’s continued aversion to oversight and
the rule of law shows a remarkable lack of respect for the American people,”
added Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office.
“The FISA court is notorious for rubberstamping most applications for
warrants. The moment that one judge
says no, the administration calls foul and attempts to browbeat Congress into
passing legislation that will give them carte blanche authority to wiretap
Americans. Lawmakers must reject
this political ambush and carefully consider any changes to FISA.”
To read the ACLU’s
letter to Congressional leadership on FISA changes, go to: http://www.aclu.org/safefree/general/31154leg20070731.html
To read the ACLU’s
Myths and Facts about FISA, go to: http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/31144res20070731.html
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