Section by Section of the RESTORE Act (10/17/2007)
SECTION BY SECTION H.R. 3773, The RESTORE
Act
AG= Attorney General DNI = Director of National Intelligence FISA= Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act FISC = Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court FISCR = Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of
Review Section
1:
Title
Section
2:
Foreign to Foreign -- Clarifies that a court order is not required for the
collection of foreign to foreign to foreign communications of non-US
persons. If a US person is accidentally captured in
this surveillance, his information must be destroyed within 7 days unless there
is an emergency.
Foreign to US and vice versa --Permits the government
to apply for a program order from the FISC, as long as it is targeting a
foreigner overseas, to collect all communications coming into and going out of
the United States, even if an
American in the US is on the other end. Unlike the
foreign to foreign program above, the government need not destroy Americans’
information. (see below for more detail)
Section
3(a-c):
Creates application and approval process for these new surveillance programs to
capture US-foreign and foreign-US communications. The application
includes a statement that the “targets” of the electronic surveillance are
non-US persons reasonably believed to be outside of the US who may communicating with persons inside
the US. It should also
include a description of the methods to determine that there is a reasonable
belief that the targets are out of the U.S. and not US persons, and also to what
extent the government plans to “minimize” US information (which does not mean
destroy or purge, but try to limit the use of the information in certain
circumstances).
Clarifies that the application need not even specify
what “facilities, places, premises or property” will be tapped.
Problems: Sets up a probably
unconstitutional “program warrant” or “general warrant” because it does not
describe with particularity the accounts or people to be searched or the
communications/records to be seized, as required by the Fourth
Amendment.
Another concern is that the application will be
virtually blank. It is unclear how useful the FISC oversight will be
when the court knows neither who is targeted nor what facilities are even being
accessed to collect the information.
Section
3(d):
Sets up court review where the secret FISC evaluates whether the secret
guidelines are reasonably calculated to determine that the targets are not
US person and are outside of
the US. Allows the government to
appeal if an application for one of these programs is denied, and provides for
interim orders while the appeal proceeds.
Section
3(e):
On approval, the FISC
order shall authorize the surveillance, direct telecommunication companies and
other information “custodians” to turn over information and provide access to
their facilities and infrastructure, and direct the government to pay the
telecoms for their participation.
Clarifies that if telecoms refuse to cooperate they can
be held in contempt of court.
A judge shall assess compliance with minimization
procedures quartlerly by “reviewing the circumstances under which information
concerning US persons was acquired retained or disseminated.”
Problems: Only a significant purpose of the
surveillance need be for “foreign intelligence” purposes,
permitting this tool to be used primarily for other purposes such as criminal
ones, allowing the government to go around long standing Fourth Amendment and
Title III procedures.
Perhaps the biggest flaw of the entire bill, it
leaves the decision of how to handle U.S information in the hands of the
Administration and its secret “minimization procedures.” To clarify,
minimization procedures are not, and have never been, made public. They do
not require that American information be destroyed – except in the narrow
circumstance of wiretapping an embassy, which absolutely does not apply to this
program. In the end, the only role for the court is to negotiate secret
rules that do not even require that American information be destroyed, or
ultimately prevent American information from being used or
disseminated. And there is no explicit authority for the court to
modify the orders or the minimization procedures if it finds a problem during
its quarterly review.
Section
4: Creates new
emergency authority for the government to issue program orders without court
review, lasting up to 45 days. Must file with court within 7 days of
starting the new program.
Problem: Unlike the current emergency valve in
FISA, the government can keep and use any information it collects under its
self-issued emergency orders even if the court later determines that there was
no emergency or the surveillance didn’t otherwise meet the requirements of
FISA. This eliminates the current incentive to use emergency orders only
in truly emergency situations.
Section
5: Orders must be sent to the Judic and Intel
Committees. The DOJ IG will conduct quartlerly audits determining how many
Americans are both targeted, and swept up without targeting under the new
programs.
The government will also report quarterly about its
compliance with the secret guidelines negotiated with the secret court and the
use of the new 45-day emergency warrantless wiretapping authority.
Problems: The government will
only be reporting to Congress whether the AG is following his own secret rules
about when to return to court to get a warrant.
Further, the IG need not explain how the information
about Americans is being used or who has access to it after it is collected
through the newly permissible dragnet, but only report on the total
numbers.
Section
6: Allows the
FISC to sit en banc.
Section
7: Authorizes
four more FISA judges for a total of 15.
Section
8: Reiterates
that FISA is the exclusive means for foreign intelligence wiretapping.
Section
9: Allows the
government to warrantless wiretap for 15 days if Congress expressly passes an
AUMF to that effect or if the US is attacked and the Congress
cannot convene.
Section 10:
Requires an DOJ IG audit the so-called “Terrorist
Surveillance Program” and any other collection outside of FISA. To be
submitted in six months and discuss the legality of the programs.
Section
11: Institutes record
keeping system.
Section
12: Provides for more
resources to facilitate the new orders and audits.
Section
13: Requires electronic
filing to be developed for FISA applications.
Section 14:
Provides for further training of intelligence personnel
and the FISA process.
Section 15:
Requires a congressional briefing on the so-called
“Terrorist Surveillance Program” and other surveillance programs within 7 days
of passage.
Section
16: Technical and conforming
amendments.
Section
17: Creates a sunset for the
RESTORE Act on December 31, 2009.
Manager’s Amdt:
Requires that the government give a certification to
telecom companies that the program is pursuant to this new program to accompany
the court order for compliance.
Manager’s Amdt:
Extends the criminal statute of limitations under FISA
from 5 to 10 years.
Manager’s Amdt:
States that “Nothing in this Act
or the amendments made by this Act shall be construed to prevent lawfully
conducted surveillance of or grant any rights to an alien not lawfully permitted
to be in or remain in the United States.”
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