Written Testimony of Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office, Submitted to the House Judiciary Committee for a Hearing on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (9/5/2007)
Testimony of
Caroline Fredrickson Director, Washington Legislative
Office American Civil Liberties Union
Protect Privacy by Overhauling the Protect America
Act U.S. House of Representatives Committee on the
Judiciary
Hearing
Regarding Warrantless Surveillance and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA): The Role of Checks and
Balances in Protecting Americans’ Privacy Rights
September 5,
2007 2141 Rayburn House Office
Building
Chairman Conyers, Ranking Member Smith, and Committee
Members, on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”),
America’s oldest and largest civil
liberties organization, its 53 affiliates and hundreds of thousands of Members,
we write to share our views with the Committee regarding the recently enacted
Protect America Act, Pub. L. 110-55, and legislation to replace that Act. Because § 6 of the Protect America Act
causes the Act to sunset if not reauthorized or replaced within six months, the
ACLU recommends that this Committee allow the Act to expire. Alternatively, should Congress feel
compelled to legislate, Congress should replace the Act with a full scale
revision that respects the letter and spirit of the Fourth Amendment with
regards to intercepting U.S. persons’ communications.
Congress must also vigorously resist legislative
attempts to grant retroactive immunity to government employees and
telecommunications companies and their employees for facilitating criminal and
unconstitutional wiretapping.
Absolving these individuals and companies of their violations of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act’s (“FISA”) will encourage future
lawlessness and interception of communications outside of FISA. Ultimately, extinguishing liability –
especially while litigation is proceeding – will prevent U.S.
citizens from vindicating their constitutional, legal and contractual rights as
customers of the telecommunications companies.
Neither the Protect America Act, nor S. 2011, authored
by Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) and Intelligence Committee Chair, Sen. John D.
Rockefeller, sufficiently protect the privacy of communications of innocent
U.S. persons. Any legislation replacing the Protect
America Act must reintroduce privacy protections into FISA’s treatment of
communications intercepted between U.S. persons and persons reasonably believed to
be outside of the United
States.
In
passing the Protect America Act, Congress legislated in the dark and should not
do so again. Despite repeated
requests for documents, testimony and briefings regarding the illegal,
warrantless wiretapping conducted at the President’s bequest, Congress has to
date been utterly stymied in conducting meaningful oversight over those illegal
acts. The White House has flouted Congressional subpoenas and
deadlines for the provision of documents related to that warrantless
wiretapping. The end result is that
Congress has effectively been prevented from conducting oversight regarding
surveillance conducted on U.S. soil since September 12,
2001. In essence, Congress has been
all but eliminated as an independent check on abuses by the President and the
National Security Agency (“NSA”).
No amendments to FISA should be made permanent until Congress and the
public receive answers about what surveillance activities have been conducted
over the last six years and the legal basis for those programs. This Committee should hold extensive
public hearings regarding the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping and the
telecommunications companies’ facilitation of that illegal wiretapping. Information regarding this illegal
activity to determine how the Administration ignored the clear mandates of FISA
should be forthcoming prior to the enactment of any new legislation. After all, any Congressional effort to
carefully draw the statutory lines between permissible surveillance to prevent
acts of terrorism is meaningless should this, or a future, Administration choose
to ignore or circumvent FISA’s mandates and limitations. Further, information regarding how the
authorities provided for in the Protect America Act are being interpreted and
operationalized by the NSA should be shared with Congress. To facilitate Congress’ legislative
efforts, the NSA should be required to articulate with specificity the
problematic aspects of the prior statutory scheme and whether the Protect
America Act responds to those intelligence concerns.
The ACLU also recommends that Congress codify a FISA
regime that increases the privacy protections for U.S.
persons’ communications as the level of intrusiveness of intercepts of those
communications increases. If
content is acquired and/or reviewed, particularly where probable cause has not
been developed to investigate a U.S. persons’ communications, the
government’s burden of protecting that communication should be increased, and
commensurate limitations should be placed on the use or dissemination of that
communication to ensure compliance with the Fourth Amendment. Additionally, meaningful judicial review
of the NSA must be built into any legislation so that the court may act to
ensure the privacy of U.S. persons’ communications. Only the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court (“FISC”) can insist that surveillance is
targeted to individualized intercepts.
Court review is also essential so as to force the NSA and Department of
Justice to comply with the letter and spirit of any new law enacted.
II.
Analysis of the Protect America Act and S.
2011
President Bush enacted sweeping revisions to FISA on August 5, 2007 by
signing into law the Protect America Act.
The Act was signed just two days after final passage by the U.S. Senate
and one day after final passage by the U.S. House of Representatives. Director of National Intelligence
McConnell allegedly lobbied heavily and personally for the Act’s passage,
briefing more than 200 Members of Congress on the NSA’s purported need to close
an intelligence gap. This rush to
legislate led to a substantially overbroad law that does not appear to provide
the type of narrowly-targeted expansion of surveillance authority McConnell
claims to have sought. Rather, the
Act appears to have eroded Americans’ privacy protections for their e-mails and
phone calls to and from foreign-based persons – including U.S.
citizens living, working or traveling abroad – in a tidal wave of over-reaching
legislative language. The ACLU
calls upon Congress to reverse this sea change in the laws governing
surveillance by the U.S.
government of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent
residents.
The Protect America Act turns the
Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution on its head.[i] It eviscerates privacy protections for
U.S. persons’ communications and does
great damage to the Fourth Amendment’s protections by:
(i)
expressly permitting non-targeted,
warrantless mass acquisition of U.S. persons’ communications with
foreign-based communicants by defining such communications as outside of the
definition of FISA-protected “electronic surveillance”;
(ii)
failing to require the NSA to
demonstrate that they have probable cause to believe one party to the
communication is a terrorist or foreign power before intercepting U.S.
persons’ communications;
(iii)
eliminating requirements that
factual predicates for surveillance be listed with specificity such as the
“facilities, places, premises, or property at which the acquisition of foreign
intelligence information will be directed;” and
(iv)
implicitly permitting the
limitless warehousing and subsequent data mining of both the metadata regarding
those communications and the content of the communications
themselves.
First, the Act states that all
intercepts of communications – both
e-mail and phone calls – between any person the government “reasonably
believe[s]” is located outside the U.S. and anyone within the U.S. are exempt
from the definition of Fourth Amendment-protected electronic surveillance. Protect America
Act, Pub. L. 110-55 at § 105B(a).
Thus, for the first time, FISA: (i) permits the mass acquisition of U.S.
persons’ communications, (ii) eliminates any requirement that the
government target its acquisition to acquire only certain persons’
conversations; and (iii) eliminates the requirement that a judge approve those
interceptions. Now, if the
government is directing its surveillance at foreign-based communicants it may
sweep up the conversations of U.S.-based persons. FISA previously required the government
to establish reasonable suspicion or probable cause to obtain, keep and utilize
the communications of U.S. persons that were inadvertently
acquired. Second, the Protect
America Act eliminates any requirement that the NSA, in obtaining a general
warrant, provide facts to target the interceptions to specific facilities,
places, premises or property.
Id. at § 105B(b). In short, the FISC no longer plays a
meaningful role – one that it had played effectively since 1978 – and it can no
longer provide judicial oversight given the powers granted to the NSA in the
Protect America Act. This amendment
to FISA essentially establishes a system of surveillance solely dictated and
controlled by Executive Branch fiat without the independent review by the
judicial branch. Further, the Act
essentially eliminates judicial review of DOJ and NSA activities by the
FISC. The end result is a cosmetic
patina of judicial review without providing the FISC with substantive authority
to halt or modify improper intercepts.
Finally, the Protect America Act permits continued warrantless
surveillance of a person, account or facility – even when it becomes clear that
the subject of surveillance will have repeated contact with a U.S.
person.
All of these constitutional and
policy failings are only exacerbated by the fact that the Protect America Act
allows the government to retain, use and disseminate the content of or the data
about these communications however it sees fit. While supporters of the Protect America
Act point to so-called “minimization procedures,” those procedures have never
been used on mass, otherwise legalized collection, nor have those procedures
ever had a public airing. In
effect, the Protect America Act resorts back to “trust us,” and leaves the
Administration to its own devices to operate in secret and without any
limitation on how to treat U.S. information. Thus, the NSA is now permitted to
intercept and utilize communications without minimizing the U.S.
persons’ identity and personally identifiable information. Prior to the Protect American Act,
personally identifiable information and “header” information identifying a
particular U.S. person would have been
minimized.
The Act, therefore, erects a
geometric increase in the kind and quantum of U.S.
persons’ communications that may be intercepted. It is no exaggeration to state that all
communications – both e-mails and phone calls – originating from a
non-U.S.-based person could be intercepted. Similarly, the communications to
people abroad originating from the U.S. also are likely to be
intercepted as part of the communications chain. In short, it is likely that all, or
substantially all, communications entering or exiting the U.S.
will be intercepted. The
implications of such a change are profound, likely leading to the acquisition of
all communications in the following illustrative scenarios:
(i)
communications to U.S.-based businesses from their foreign-based
subsidiaries or business partners/clients;
(ii)
calls and e-mails to U.S.-based parents of high-school, college,
and university students participating in “study abroad” programs;
(iii) calls and e-mails between missionaries and their religious sponsor
churches, mosques and synagogues in the U.S.;
(iv) e-mails and calls from any U.S. citizen travelling outside of the U.S. on
vacation; and
(v) purely domestic calls and e-mails between U.S. persons that are routed through foreign
countries, such as Canada, simply for ease,
cost-savings, or network efficiency.
Now, the mass interception of
foreign-to-U.S. communications is permissible due to the evisceration of Fourth
Amendment-based statutory requirements that mandated the targeting of,
interception and judicial approval of individualized surveillance.
The Protect America Act also
implicitly authorizes mass warehousing and limitless data mining of the
communications of U.S. persons intercepted. The Act states that the government may
engage in “acquisition [of] foreign intelligence information” from a “custodian”
either as the communications are “transmitted or while they are stored . . .
.” Id. at § 105B(a)(3). In essence, the Act facilitates the
application by the NSA for a general warrant for a group of individuals and
their communications, no matter whether a U.S.
person’s communications are swept up.
Because Congress failed to limit the types of data mining that may occur,
or prevent data mining of the metadata concerning the communications, we can
expect the application of link analysis data mining to attempt to establish the
relationship between a foreign-based communicant and the U.S. person with whom
they communicate, even if the contact is casual, incidental or accidental. Thus, an innocent U.S. person whose
communications are intercepted because they received a phone call or e-mail from
a person reasonably believed to be located overseas could come under government
suspicion simply because they were sent an e-mail or received a phone call.
The failure of Congress to limit
the data mining of either the metadata concerning the communications or the
content of those communications is likely to have profound legal and practical
consequences for innocent U.S. persons. The Act does not limit the NSA’s ability
to interpret the communications intercepted, thus innocent U.S.
persons’ communications could be misinterpreted because the data mining of the
content of those communications detects the presence of some code word. The implications for innocent U.S.
persons wrongly drawn into this web of government suspicion are heretofore
unknown. Certain questions
naturally arise from this lack of legal limitation:
(i)
will innocent U.S. persons’ exercise of legally or
constitutionally guaranteed rights and privileges be limited?;
(ii) what redress, if any, will innocent U.S.
persons have when their communications are misinterpreted?;
(iii) how will an innocent person who is wrongly suspected recover his
or her good name and reputation?; and
(iv)
will the friends, families and associates of the wrongly suspected
U.S. persons also come under
suspicion? If so, are there
any limits to the concentric rings of communicants (i.e., how many
degrees of separation removed from the foreign-based communicant) the government
will draw into this burgeoning web of suspicion?
The Protect America Act’s
revisions of FISA also render the longstanding law unrecognizable by virtually
eliminating the role of telecommunications providers as independent guarantors
of their customers’ privacy under this new mass communications acquisition
scheme. The Act substantially
eliminates the ability of the telecoms to resist facilitating the interception
of U.S. persons’ communications. As originally drafted, FISA placed the
telecoms in the shoes of their customers and permitted the telecoms to go to
court to resist an allegedly improper FISA intercept application on a customer’s
behalf. The Protect America Act
eviscerates this third-party guarantor role. It permits the NSA to demand that
telecoms facilitate interception.
Id. at § 105B(e). Should a telecom resist such a
directive, the NSA may obtain a court order compelling facilitation. Id. at § 105B(g). Failure to comply with that court order
is punishable with a finding of contempt of court. Id. Although the Act sets forth
procedures for a telecom to challenge a directive, the streamlining of the FISA
application – such as the elimination of the requirement that the NSA provide
specific targeting facts – prevents attorneys for any telecom from having
certain pre-existing avenues to challenge the legal sufficiency of a mass
acquisition directive. Further, the
FISC must review any ex parte, sealed submissions regarding the interception,
which lessens the likelihood that a telecom could successfully resist such an
interception directive. Id. at § 105B(k).
In addition, to reduce the telecom
industry’s resistance to facilitating mass communications interception, the
Protect America Act provides significant financial inducement to the
telecoms. Pursuant to the Act, the
telecoms are compensated “at the prevailing rate” for “providing information,
facilities, or assistance” to aid the government’s wiretapping. Id. at § 105B(f). Thus, the Act guarantees that
wiretapping facilitation remains profitable for the telecoms. More importantly, to further erode
telecom resistance to this massive wiretapping expansion, the Act grants the
telecoms seeming absolute prospective immunity for wiretapping of e-mails and
phone calls pursuant to the Act.
Id. at § 105B(l).
The reporting requirements of the
Act do not guarantee that Congress, much less the media or the public, will have
sufficient information about wiretapping permitted under the Act to judge its
efficacy or the NSA’s compliance with the Act. The Attorney General of the U.S. is only required to brief the four lead
Congressional Committees – the House and Senate Intelligence and Judiciary
Committees – semiannually. That
report need only provide a “description . . . of incidents of non-compliance by
an element of the Intelligence Community with guidelines or procedures
established for determining that the acquisition of foreign intelligence
[pursuant to the Act] concerns persons reasonably believed to be outside the
United
States.”
Further, the report only must list the number of certifications issued by
the Attorney General and the number of directives to telecoms to facilitate
interceptions during the relevant period. In short, Congress’ failure to
require additional information or reporting specificity prevents the provision
of information to judge:
(i)
whether the Act’s expansion was justified or useful from an
intelligence resource perspective;
(ii)
whether violations of U.S. persons’ constitutional or legal
rights occurred;
(iii)
whether the interceptions ordered are targeted in any way to
comport with the Fourth Amendment’s requirements; and
(iv) whether and/or what disciplinary action was taken for any
violations of any procedural,
regulatory, legal or constitutional violations by any NSA or Department
of Justice employee.
The Protect America Act also
includes a six month-long “sunset” provision, which causes the Act to expire if
it is not replaced within six months after the date of enactment (i.e.,
after February 5, 2007).
The
Democrats’ alternative legislative proposal, S. 2011 (the short title of S. 2011
was also the Protect America Act, therefore, hereinafter “Democrats’
alternative” or “S. 2011”), introduced by senior Intelligence Committee Member
Senator Carl Levin (D-MI) and Committee Chair John D. Rockefeller (D-WV), failed
ACLU standards in several important respects. First, the Democrats’ alternative
eliminated targeting requirements in language identical to the Protect America
Act. S. 2011 at §
105(B)(b)(2). This allows for the
mass acquisition of communications involving at least one U.S.
person. Further, the legislation
authorized year-long interceptions.
Id. at § 105B(a). Additionally, the Democrats’
alternative would have created a “listen-first-apply-for-a-warrant-later”
procedure authorizing immediate interception of U.S. persons’ communications with persons
reasonably believed to be outside the U.S. Id. at § 105C. Finally, the alternative left the
Executive Branch to minimize U.S. persons’ communications through secret
Attorney General-issued procedures, and did not require that improperly
intercepted U.S. persons’ communications be
destroyed. This amendment would
have permitted surveillance without any indicia of Fourth Amendment protection
in that U.S. persons’
communications could be intercepted and reviewed in the absence of any targeting
of the foreign-based communicant and without probable cause or reasonable
suspicion to have been developed with respect to the U.S.
person.
The
Democrats’ alternative was superior to the Protect America Act in two respects,
neither of which outweighed the alternative’s implications for vastly expanded
acquisition of U.S. persons’ communications with
foreign-based persons. First,
S. 2011 would have required court review of the Attorney General’s
certification and application for surveillance. Id. at § 105B. In contrast, the Protect America
Act requires only certification by the Attorney General. Second, S. 2011 would have required
the NSA to obtain a warrant from the FISC to continue interception at the point
at which the U.S. person became the subject of
surveillance. Id. at §
105B(d). The ACLU supports both of
these improvements.
III. Recommended
Principles for Reforming the Protect America Act
The ACLU notes again that Congress is not compelled to pass additional
legislation. The effect of not
doing so would be to return FISA to the statutory limitations in place prior to
enactment of the Protect America Act.
The ACLU believes that no legislation would be better than the permanent
authorization of the Protect America Act or any legislation that substantially
mirrors that Act. Further, any
grant of retroactive telecom immunity will reward law-breaking and fundamentally
undermine the FISA structure by eliminating any arm’s length distance between
the telecoms and the government. In
short, should the telecoms be given amnesty for violating the law, AT&T,
Verizon and other companies will essentially be functioning as
quasi-governmental appendages of the NSA.
In the alternative, should Congress feel compelled to legislate, the ACLU
recommends that this Committee adhere to the following principles in drafting
legislation to replace the Protect America Act:
1.
Any further legislation must
reiterate that FISA is the exclusive means of intelligence gathering on
U.S. soil, and the legislation must
include automatically triggered consequences for violating this
exclusivity. As initially
enacted by Congress, the exclusivity of FISA was unambiguous. This new exercise in defining the lawful
extent of surveillance authorities will be useless if the resulting legislation
can be ignored. We further
recommend that any new legislation state explicitly that the Authorization for
the Use of Military Force in Afghanistan and Iraq do
not authorize any surveillance outside FISA. Additionally, we recommend that the NSA
be required to report to Congress repeatedly on its implementation of any new
surveillance activities conducted pursuant to FISA.
2.
Interceptions of
U.S. persons’ communications
within the U.S. should continue to be included
within, and, therefore, protected by the definition of “electronic
surveillance.” The Protect
America Act’s seeming elimination of this protection should be repealed.
3.
Collection and isolation of the
particular communications sought by the government should be conducted by the
telecommunications industry itself – the government should not be given direct
and unfettered access to telecommunications infrastructure. We are concerned that the Protect America
Act appears to allow the government to “sit on the line” and scoop up all
communications and sort through them later. Instead, the government should receive
only the information it is authorized to intercept by law.
4. The FISC must play a meaningful
role in ensuring compliance with the law. First and foremost, electronic
surveillance should be authorized by the FISC through the issuance of an
individualized warrant based on probable cause. This oversight should
include, where possible, prior and, always, regular judicial approval and review
of surveillance based on full disclosure about what information is to be sought,
whose communications will be collected, how it will be gathered and how content
and other data in communications to and from the United
States will be handled. The Court must
also have regular access to information about how many U.S. communications are being collected and the
authority to require court orders when it becomes clear that a certain program
or surveillance of a target is scooping up communications of U.S.
persons.
5. Under any new amendment to FISA
established in your legislation, when the government intercepts a communication
to which a person in the U.S. is a party, there should be a presumption
requiring the NSA to immediately destroy that communication unless the NSA
documents that it has reason to believe that the communication reflects an
immediate threat to life or limb.
All public FISA legislation has been deficient in that it has lacked a
presumption of destruction of the improperly intercepted communications of
U.S. persons. Without such a presumption, the
Administration’s secret “minimization” procedures will be all that govern
U.S. communications. Congress has the authority – and the
responsibility – to explicitly define how these communications are treated, and
should no longer defer to the Executive branch’s unknown policies. If the programs are truly directed at
people overseas, this should be noncontroversial.
6. Once the government has reason to
believe that there is a substantial likelihood that a specific account, person
or facility will have contact with someone in the United States, the government
should be required to return to the FISC to obtain a court order for continued
surveillance of that account, person or facility. Reliance on the FISC will help ensure
the privacy of U.S. persons’
communications.
[i]
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution provides in pertinent part that “no
warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation,
and particularly describing the place to be search, and the persons or things to
be seized.”
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