FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON - In anticipation of Thursday's expected mark-up by the Senate
Judiciary Committee of various bills concerning the warrantless domestic
surveillance of Americans by the National Security Agency, the American Civil
Liberties Union today urged members of that panel to reject attempts to
legislate on that issue without a full investigation into the illegal
program.
The following can be attributed to Anthony D. Romero, ACLU Executive
Director:
"Tomorrow the Senate Judiciary Committee is poised to consider bills that
would ratify the illegal NSA program to spy on Americans. Congress should
investigate the illegal spying program, and not legislate in the dark or
after-the-fact. The American people are entitled to know how many of their phone
calls and emails the NSA has monitored without any judicial check or congressional approval. How else will we know that anti-terrorism resources are
focused on al Qaeda and not on innocent American residents?
"In our America, no one is above the law, not even the president. Whether it
is by allowing torture abroad and failing to hold high-level officials
accountable, or eavesdropping without a court warrant at home, this president is
violating America's values of freedom and fairness. Congress has failed to serve
as a check on the executive branch, eroding a cornerstone of our Constitution.
"Our Founding Fathers insisted on preserving our liberty by limiting federal
power and providing rules for the government to follow before invading our
privacy. One of the things they most feared was unbridled, unchecked executive
power.
"This administration's track record on domestic spying and running rough shod
over the Constitution is shameful. If Congress aids the president in sweeping
the facts under the rug rather than getting them on the table, their crumbling
to the presidential pressure rather than defending the Constitution will be
equally shameful."
For more on the ACLU’s concerns with the warrantless NSA
eavesdropping program, go to: www.aclu.org/nsaspying