DOJ Threatens to Sue Maine PUC (8/2/2006)
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MCLU Says Mainers Deserve Answers
PORTLAND, ME – The United States Department of Justice has threatened to sue
the Maine Public Utilities Commission if it decides to open an investigation
into Verizon Maine’s cooperation with the National Security Agency’s warrantless
surveillance program. In a letter dated Friday, July 28, U.S. Assistant
Attorney General Peter Keisler cited the DOJ’s history of issuing lawsuits in
response to similar investigations in New Jersey and Missouri.
“The DOJ is going after each state commission that dares do its job to
protect the privacy and interests of the citizens in that state,” said Shenna
Bellows, Executive Director of the Maine Civil Liberties Union, which intervened
on behalf of the people who called for the investigation. “Threatening to
sue anyone who asks questions is the federal government’s way of keeping the
public in the dark about its actions. It sets a dangerous precedent.”
A complaint filed in May by 22 Verizon customers, and later signed on to by
almost 400 Mainers, asks the Maine PUC to investigate whether Verizon disclosed
call records of its Maine customers without the customers’ knowledge or legal
authorization. Verizon asked the PUC to drop the case on the grounds that
an investigation would require confirming or denying information that it claims
it could neither confirm nor deny.
The subsequent Department of Justice letter claims that state commissions
governing utilities within the state do not have the authority to interfere with
federal matters involving those utilities. The Maine Civil Liberties Union
pointed out that the question of whether Verizon Maine handed over the records
of its customers in the state, regardless of who may have received the records,
is governed by state privacy law as well as federal statute.
“This is a situation where the federal government may have violated the
rights of the citizens,” said Doug Cowie, who took the lead in asking the PUC to
investigate. “Mainers have the right to know if their private records have
been shared without their knowledge, and it is the duty of the public utilities
commission to help them find out. The PUC should not be bullied into
protecting private corporations from public scrutiny.”
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