ACLU Section By Section Analysis of S. 2248, Rockefeller / Bush Administration FISA bill (11/2/2007)
Summary: This
bill unconstitutionally allows the government to wiretap Americans’ emails and
phone calls without prior, individualized court review, and without any
suspicion of wrongdoing. It
declares all Americans’ international communications fair game, allowing the
government to collect, keep, and use them forever without any restrictions on
how these communications should be protected. It provides for virtually no
checks and balances on the wiretaps, providing that the only role for the secret
FISA court is to amend general procedures after surveillance has begun.
AG = Attorney General DNI = Director of National Intelligence FISA = Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act FISC = Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court ECPs = Electronic Communication Providers
TITLE I: COURT-FREE WIRETAPPING AND PHYSICAL SEARCHES
SECTION 101: WARRANTLESS
WIRETAPPING
Creates a new Title VII of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act of 1978 to provide for year-long blanket surveillance orders
issued directly by the Attorney General / Director of National Intelligence
without prior or individualized court review.
Sec. 701:
Declares that the definition of “electronic surveillance,” and therefore
spying overseen by standard FISA procedures, does not include spying targeted
“at a person reasonably believed to be located outside the United
States.”
Sec. 702: Definitions.
Sec. 703 (a-b): Allows the AG and DNI to issue one year orders for surveillance of
communications where one party is outside of the US. The only limitation on the orders is
that the surveillance powers not be used to intentionally target a particular,
known person in the US.
PROBLEMS: The
government can pick up all international communications coming into and out of
the US, even if an American is one party
to the call. That the person
may not be the so-called “target”
of the wiretap provides no protection – his or her communications are picked up
anyway. All of this is done without the review of the court, raising clear and
serious Fourth Amendment concerns.
Sec. 703 ( c):
Requires that targeting of US persons, who are outside of the United
States, occur with a traditional, individualized FISA warrant if the acquisition
is in the US. However, it allows
the government to collect communications of a US
person abroad if the acquisition occurs overseas and the FISA court finds that
the target is an agent of a foreign power.
Within 30 days of passage, the bill requires the AG to submit guidelines
to the FISC about how it will determine whether people overseas are US
persons.
Sec. 703
(d-e): Requires the AG and DNI to adopt “targeting procedures that are
reasonably designed to ensure that any acquisition [directed at people overseas]
is limited to targeting persons reasonably believed to be located outside the
US. Allows judicial review pursuant
to section (i) below.
Sec. 703(f): The AG and DNI will adopt minimization procedures for the new warrantless
program to collect communications where at least one party is overseas. Allows judicial review pursuant to
section (i) below.
PROBLEMS:
“Minimization” as currently defined in FISA and this bill does not
protect Americans’ communications.
Just like the Protect America Act, there is no affirmative
responsibility to sequester or destroy the communications of innocent Americans that is picked up
through the new warrantless dragnets. The government can use and share American
information “consistent with the need of the US to
obtain, produce and disseminate foreign intelligence information.”
Sec. 703(g)
Requires the AG and DNI to certify that the new warrantless
surveillance: (i) will be conducted
in line with procedures to reasonably determine that surveillance is targeting
people outside of the US; (ii) that these procedures are consistent with the
Fourth Amendment; (iii) that a significant purpose is to obtain foreign
intelligence information; (iv) that minimization procedures are consistent with
Section 101(h) of FISA; (v) the program involves the assistance of a
communications service provider; and (vi) does not constitute “electronic
surveillance,” e.g., intentionally targets someone in the US.
The certification need not identify “the specific facilities, places,
premises or property at which the acquisition’ will be directed or
conducted. It shall be sent to the
FISC within 5 days of issuance.
PROBLEMS:
Just like the current Protect America Act, there is absolutely no
requirement of wrongdoing, much less a necessary link to terrorism, before the
government can acquire Americans’ phone calls and emails. Further, the orders will be nearly blank
as they do not even need to specify who’s being surveilled, the type of
communications being collected, or even the facilities the government is tapping
into. This again raises acute
Fourth Amendment problems of probable cause and particularity.
Sec. 703(h):
Allows the AG and DNI to order communication providers to open their
facilities to the government. The
government shall compensate the ECPs for their efforts. Grants prospective immunity for
companies that rely on directives issued under this new program.
Allows recipients to challenge a directive before the FISC, and allows
the government to seek contempt of court against ECPs who do not cooperate with
a directive. Whether hearing a
challenge or a contempt motion, the FISC will only set aside the directive if it
“finds that the directive does not meet the requirements of this section or is
otherwise unlawful.” Permits
appeals up to the FISCR and the Supreme Court.
PROBLEMS: May
provide for stiff new penalties for ECPs who may refuse to cooperate with the
new warrantless dragnet because they believe it to be unconstitutional.
Sec. 703(i-k)
The FISC shall have jurisdiction to review the certification under (g) to
determine whether it meets the statutory elements above. It will also have jurisdiction to review
the targeting guidelines required by subsection (e) to determine that
acquisition activity is “limited to the targeting of persons reasonably believed
to be located outside the United States.” Finally, the court will review
minimization procedures to make sure they comply with FISA section 101(h). Targeting and minimization may also be
reviewed for consistency with the Fourth Amendment.
The court has the explicit authority to order the collection of
communications cease or order changes in the program.
PROBLEMS:
After the fact, aggregate review of processes does not meet the Fourth
Amendment requirements of probable cause and particularity. Just like the
Protect America Act, the Administration / Rockefeller bill renders the secret
FISA court nearly useless, allowing it intervene only after surveillance is
under way, and then only on the basis of information handed over by the
executive branch.
703(l):
At least once every six months the AG and DNI shall assess their own
compliance with their own guidelines and send the results to the FISC and the
Intelligence Committees.
The Inspectors General of the Justice Department and any other
intelligence element are authorized – but not required – to review whether their
agencies are in compliance with targeting and minimization procedures. They also “shall” review the
distribution of US person
information and number of targets later determined to be in the US and
how many of their communications were reviewed. These reports shall go to the AG, DNI,
and the Intelligence Committees.
Each element of the intelligence community is also required to conduct an
annual review “to determine whether there is reason to believe that foreign
intelligence information has been or will be obtained from the acquisition” and
whether minimization procedures were effective in protecting US
information. These reports shall go
to the FISC.
At least twice a year the AG shall report to the Intelligence and
Judiciary Committees. Those reports
shall include such things as copies of certifications, directives, legal
filings, enforcement actions, descriptions of compliance reviews and the annual
review conducted by each element of the intelligence agency.
PROBLEMS:
The overwhelming weight of this section allows the government to police
itself as to whether it is following its own secret guidelines, which it then
secretly reports to the Intelligence Committees. Minimal reporting is due to the
Judiciary Committees and the FISC.
704(a): Subjects information collected under this new program to the standard
FISA rules about use of information under section 106 – for example, notifying a
defendant that FISA evidence will be used against him in his trial.
PROBLEMS: It
exempts any emergency surveillance from notification requirements, whether a
true emergency or not. FISA has
always allowed emergency surveillance, with the caveat that if the secret court
later determines no true emergency existed, the information could not be used
and had to be destroyed – an exclusionary rule of sorts to discourage abuse of
this far reaching authority. There
will an incentive to use this authority in many circumstances where no real
emergency exists.
704(b): Table of Contents
704( c): Creates a six year sunset, with the bill ceasing to have legal effect on
December 31, 2013.
SECTION 102: EXCLUSIVITY
Declares FISA and Title 18 of the United States Code the
exclusive means for conducting electronic surveillance – as originally defined
in FISA and not the new definition with international program warrants carved
out.
SECTION 103: CONGRESSIONAL ACCESS TO FISC
ORDERS
Adds FISC orders to the current semiannual Congressional
reporting. It also puts an affirmative responsibility on the AG to give FISC
orders that provide substantial legal interpretation to Congress within 45 days
of their issuance.
SECTION 104: AMENDING REGULAR FISA
APPLICATIONS
Reduces specificity of standard, individualized FISA
surveillance orders. First, it
strikes the requirements that the government state under what authority it is
seeking surveillance and provide a
list of all the surveillance devices to used and the minimization tactics
specific to each. Section 104 also amends applications so they no longer need a
detailed description of the nature of the information sought and the type of
communications or activities to be surveilled; allows only a summary of the
means by which surveillance will be effected. Adds the CIA Director to the list of
officials who may request that the AG personally review an application. Adds the
Deputy Director of the FBI to the list of officials who may issue certifications
relevant to the application.
SECTION 105: AMENDING REGULAR FISA
ORDERS
Amends the FISC orders to mirror the shorter and less
specific applications detailed in the previous section.
Extends the emergency wiretapping provision from 3 to 7
days.
Directs the FISC to simultaneously authorize pen register /
trap and trace orders at the request of the government if the FISC is otherwise
approving a wiretap order.
SECTION 106: USE OF INFORMATION
Extends the mandatory destruction requirement of accidentally
acquired, purely domestic radio
communications to all communications regardless of the mode of transmission.
SECTION 107: AMENDMENTS TO PHYSICAL
SEARCHES
Eliminates requirement that physical search applications be
detailed. Explicitly permits a
place to be searched before the target becomes the owner. Adds the Deputy Director of the FBI and
the Director of the CIA to the approval process.
TITLE II- IMMUNITY FOR
ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION SERVICE
PROVIDERS
SECTION 201: DEFINITIONS
Employs traditional definitions of electronic service
providers (ECPs). Defines their
“assistance” as “provision of access to information (including communication
contents, communications records, or other information relating to a customer or
communication), facilities, or another form of assistance.”
Defines covered civil actions as any state or federal court
action seeking money or other relief against an ECP.
SECTION 202: RETROACTIVE IMMUNITY FOR ILLEGAL
WIRETAPPING
Allows the AG to kill state and federal court cases by
certifying that either 1) the ECP did not participate in surveillance
activities, or 2) that it did so between September 11, 2001 and January 17,
2007, and participated in reliance on a written assertion by the President that
the activity was legal. Such a certification can only be reviewed by the court
for abuse of discretion.
Allow the AG or deputy AG to make the above certifications ex
parte and in camera, and requires the court to dismiss the case without
clarifying whether the case was dismissed because the ECP did not participate or
because the President provided a written certification. .
Declares that all state actions are removable to federal
court.
Applies to all cases pending at the time of passage and field
thereafter.
PROBLEMS:
Lets the AG single handedly decide whether consumers can seek justice in
state or federal court to determine whether they have been spied upon or even
seek an injunction from happening in the future. Those courts will literally have no say
about whether cases should continue.
Completely hides ECP involvement in spying by gagging the court from
distinguishing between those cases that are killed because the ECP didn’t spy,
and those cases that the AG just wants buried to hide liability. Cases will be dismissed even if they do
not seek money damages but only declaratory and injunctive relief. Writes into
law the executive branch’s unlimited power to shield an entire industry without
any public airing of facts.
SECTION 203: PROSPECTIVE IMMUNITY FOR
ECPS
Creates a new Title VIII to FISA:
Sec. 801: Definitions
Sec. 802: Allows the AG to kill any case against someone who assists the
intelligence community – an ECP, a landlord, or other custodian, for example –
by certifying to the court that the person was acting in accordance with a
government order under FISA or Title 18.
Again, allows the AG to make this certification in secret, and prevents
the court from publicly announcing under which authority the activities took
place and therefore led to dismissal.
Also the federal government is empowered to remove all state cases to
federal court.
PROBLEMS: Allows the AG to single handedly – and
preemptively – prevent Americans from asserting their rights in court. Literally, if the AG says spying is
legal, it is legal, and no court will ever be able to hear facts asserting
otherwise.
SECTION 204: PREEMPTION OF STATE
INVESTIGATIONS
Sec. 803:
Declares that no state may conduct an investigation into an ECP’s
cooperation with the intelligence community; attempt to regulate intelligence
activities; impose punishment for cooperating with the government; or bring a
civil action that will lead to disclosure of information about intelligence
activities.
The federal government may bring suit to enforce this in
federal district court.
Applies to investigations active on and after the date of
passage.
PROBLEMS:
Retroactively and prospectively prevents states from enforcing their own
privacy laws. Will kill current
state level investigations into whether laws have been broken by the warrantless
spying facilitated by ECPs.
TITLE III – OTHER
PROVISIONS
Section 301: Severability
Severability clause.
Section 302: Transition Procedures
Orders in effect pursuant to the Protect America Act shall
remain so until their original expiration dates. Orders in effect at the time of
the sunset – December 31, 2013 – shall also stay in effect until their original
expiration dates.
|