House Stands Up to Threats from the White House on Domestic Surveillance (2/14/2008)
ACLU urges
careful consideration of cherished constitutional
rights
For Immediate Release Contact: (202) 675-2312 or media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC – The
Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives stared down the White House today
and decided to stick with their version of revisions to the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act. The House voted to adjourn without letting the phone companies
off the hook for breaking the law by helping the government spy on Americas. The House is leaving town
and allowing the unconstitutional Protect America Act to expire this weekend.
Statement from Caroline
Fredrickson, director of the American Civil Liberties Union Washington
Legislative Office:
“It is heartening that the House is
standing up to the bullying from the president. The House is saying it will not
give in to the administration’s lies and fear mongering. This administration has
abused its power time and time again, and finally the House is standing up and
saying no. The House is also sticking with the decision it made back in November
not to give the phone companies and the Internet providers amnesty for illegal
actions over the past six years when they provided Americans’ private calls and
emails to the government without warrants.
“Members of the House were wise to
let the clearly unconstitutional Protect America Act expire. Now, if the
government wants to wiretap Americans on American soil it needs to get a warrant
from the FISA court.
“The House sent the president a
welcome reminder from the people that no one is above the law. Not the telecom
providers. Not the White House.”
Fredrickson said
that although the Protect America Act is
set to expire this weekend, it doesn’t mean the new mass, untargeted
surveillance programs authorized under that act will expire. Certain provisions
of the Protect America Act will live beyond the law’s expiration date,
including:
· Orders under the
Protect America Act can last for up to a
year. Orders issued in the past six
months will continue through their internal expiration date. So, for
example, if the attorney general and director of national intelligence issue
year-long orders on 2/15/08, they will run uninhibited until 2/15/09. (See
PAA Section 6: Authorizations in Effect - Authorizations for the
acquisition of foreign intelligence information pursuant to the amendments made
by this Act, and directives issued pursuant to such authorizations, shall remain
in effect until their expiration.)
· Orders are not specific
to individuals and can pick up new targets in the future. Although the orders are
secret, we know the authority granted to the executive branch allowed them to
create whole programs of surveillance that are not confined to any specific
individual or facility – in fact, that breadth is precisely what the PAA is
about. So, as programs continue, it stands to reason agents can pick up new
suspects, phone lines, email accounts, etc., without the need to return to
court.
In addition to all these continuing
PAA authorities, if the government wants to listen to terrorists abroad it has a
host of other options:
· Collecting the call
overseas where no warrant or order is required at all · Collecting the call
here without an order under the 72-hour emergency provision · Collecting the call
here under a FISA court order
To read more about the ACLU’s
efforts to keep America safe and free and
specifically to read about the FISA fight, visit www.aclu.org/fisa
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