Supreme Court Refuses To Review Warrantless Wiretapping Case (2/19/2008)
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Ruling Allows Executive Branch To
Police Itself, Says ACLU
NEW YORK – The
U.S. Supreme Court today refused to review a legal challenge to the Bush
administration’s warrantless surveillance program. The case was brought by the
American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of prominent journalists, scholars,
attorneys and national nonprofit organizations who say that the unchecked
surveillance program is disrupting their ability to communicate effectively with
sources and clients. The court’s decision today lets stand an appeals court’s
ruling on narrow grounds that plaintiffs could not show with certainty that they
had been wiretapped by the National Security Agency.
The following quote can be attributed to Jameel Jaffer,
Director of the ACLU’s National Security Project:
“Congress enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
intending to protect the rights of
U.S. citizens
and residents, and the president systematically broke that law over a period of
more than five years. It’s very disturbing that the president’s actions will not
be reviewed by the Supreme Court. It shouldn’t be left to executive branch
officials alone to determine what limits apply to their own surveillance
activities and whether those limits are being honored. Allowing the executive
branch to police itself flies in the face of the constitutional system of checks
and balances.”
The following quote can be attributed to Steven R. Shapiro,
Legal Director of the ACLU:
“Although we are deeply disappointed with the Supreme Court’s
refusal to review this case, it is worth noting that today’s action says nothing
about the case’s merits and does not suggest in any way an endorsement of the
lower court’s decision. The court’s unwillingness to act makes it even more
important that Congress insist on legislative safeguards that will protect civil
liberties without jeopardizing national security.”
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