NSA Surveillance Faces First Constitutional Challenge From Guy Arrested With Secret NSA Evidence
from the more-judicial-eyes-on-the-NSA dept
Here's comes another challenge to the constitutionality of the NSA's programs. The ACLU has joined defendant Jamshid Muhtorov in filing a motion that claims his Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the NSA's surveillance efforts and seeks to suppress the admission of that evidence.
"The FISA Amendments Act affords the government virtually unfettered access to the international phone calls and emails of U.S. citizens and residents. We’ve learned over the last few months that the NSA has implemented the law in the broadest possible way, and that the rules that supposedly protect the privacy of innocent people are weak and riddled with exceptions," said ACLU Deputy Legal Director Jameel Jaffer. "Surveillance conducted under this statute is unconstitutional, and the fruits of this surveillance must be suppressed."Muhtorov is facing charges that he conspired to provide material assistance to an Uzbekistani resistance group. What makes his case unique is that, for the first time, the government is unable to withhold this source of evidence. This follows five years (since the FISA Amendments Act of 2008) of the Dept. of Justice successfully preventing defendants from discovering whether evidence was obtained via NSA surveillance.
At the outset of the prosecution, the government represented that it had conducted these searches based on “court authorization[s].” Aff. of Donald E. Hale, Special Agent, FBI ¶ 12 (attached to Crim. Compl., Doc. 1). On February 7, 2012, the government notified Mr. Muhtorov that it intended to “offer into evidence or otherwise use or disclose” in these proceedings information “information obtained and derived” from surveillance conducted under FISA, 50 U.S.C. §§ 1801–1811, 1821–1829. Doc. 12. That notice, however, made no mention of surveillance under the FAA.As the ACLU points out in its filing, none of this came to light until after the Supreme Court had decided Clapper v. Amnesty International. During that case, the government argued that Amnesty Intl and others didn't have standing to pursue the case because they couldn't show a "sufficient likelihood" that their communications were monitored. When questioned whether that assertion meant the government would be able to perpetually insulate the program from judicial review, the government deflected this by claiming it would notify defendants if evidence was obtained via bulk collection. But this wasn't true at that point or any time previous to that.
Mr. Muhtorov did not learn that the government had intercepted his communications under the FAA until October 25, 2013, twenty months after the government’s initial FISA notice. This was because, until recently, the government had a policy of concealing from criminal defendants any connection between the FAA and their prosecutions. This policy violated both the FAA itself, 50 U.S.C. §§ 1881e(a), 1806(c), and the due process rights of criminal defendants like Mr. Muhtorov.
Though the Solicitor General did not know it at the time, his representation to the Court in Amnesty was untrue. In the five years between the FAA’s enactment and the Court’s consideration of Amnesty, no criminal defendant had received notice of FAA surveillance. In fact, the Justice Department had a practice of concealing from criminal defendants the role that the FAA had played in the government’s investigation of them. The Solicitor General apparently learned of the Justice Department’s policy only because the Chair of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Senator Dianne Feinstein, made public statements about the government’s use of evidence acquired under the FAA in certain criminal prosecutions, including this one.This refers to Feinstein's grandstanding in defense of the FAA back in October, where she presented a long list of cases supposedly aided by the programs authorized by the FAA. When she did this, she exposed the government's lie, in this case an inadvertent one by the Solicitor General, who honestly thought he was presenting the truth. Anyone on that list being prosecuted should have been informed of evidence obtained through these programs. Feinstein's defense of the NSA inadvertently publicized the government's concealment of evidence sources.
With standing now granted and the government forced to admit the evidence was acquired in this fashion, the ACLU hopes to have the evidence suppressed on constitutional grounds. While the program is now undergoing some changes in terms of access, the underlying collection is still constitutionally questionable. Hopefully, this provokes another examination of the NSA's untargeted, collect-it-all programs and moves the agency closer to adherence with the Fourth Amendment.
Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites — especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.
While other websites have resorted to paywalls, registration requirements, and increasingly annoying/intrusive advertising, we have always kept Techdirt open and available to anyone. But in order to continue doing so, we need your support. We offer a variety of ways for our readers to support us, from direct donations to special subscriptions and cool merchandise — and every little bit helps. Thank you.
–The Techdirt Team
Filed Under: 4th amendment, constitutionality, criminal prosecution, fourth amendment, jamshid muhtorov, nsa, secrecy, surveillance
Companies: aclu
Reader Comments
Subscribe: RSS
View by: Time | Thread
Thinking of "fruit of the poisonous tree" doctrine and this might become a mistrial and thus influenced by a double jeopardy standing for another go by the DoJ.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Poe's Law Alert
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Bad test case
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
All evidence should be provided at the beginning of the case. They operated in murky waters and provided a tip to another agency and they worked hard to try and find a way to get that information without revealing the source.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Bad test case
Otherwise the DoJ will get the message that the end justifies the means. And that's a slippery slope you don't want to step on.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Re: Bad test case
Someone guilty being let off will validate that for them if not in public, then in secret.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
The problem is that if you use the excuse that it's okay to break the rules *this* time because *this* guy is actually a real bad guy, then you're giving free license to break the rules whenever someone comes up with a justification for doing so. That thinking leads to the NSA collecting everything it can get it's grubby hands on and making software and devices less secure with their backdoors all in the name of doing what they feel is right, whether it violates the Constitution or not, whether they're collecting data on Americans, etc.
If he's really a bad guy, then you should be able to find something on him. Even if all charges are dropped, there's a strong chance they'll have him under surveillance with a legitimate warrant and maybe do it the right way next time he tries to provide aid to a terrorist organization.
This was the same mentality that lead to David Eckert getting his repeated, fruitless anal cavity searches conducted by (unethical) medical staff and overseen by cops who "heard" from another cop that he was a bad guy who stored drugs up his butt.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
If the evidence collection was illegal, it shouldn't be admissible, regardless of whether he's guilty or innocent. Allowing it sets a bad precedent.
Consider this scenario;
Cops are pretty sure that a certain person is guilty of a murder, but they don't have enough evidence for a search warrant. So they illegally break into his house and find the murder weapon. The judge allows this to be used in court because he's a bad guy. A few months down the road, your neighbor tells the cops that he thinks you're doing something illegal, but he doesn't have any proof. No problem, the cops will just break into your home and search it, maybe shoot your dog in the process, rough up your spouse, terrorize your kids. Maybe you'll end up on the floor with a gun to your head while a cop growls in your ear "Tell us where it is or they're going to be scraping your brains off the floor."
Legal protections exist to protect the innocent from having their rights violated. If you're deciding the legality of the violations after they've already been committed, then nobody has any protection.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
But yes, even if he is a terrorist and absolutely guilty, he still has rights that the government cannot violate if they want to be able to successfully prosecute him.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re: Bad test case
Or they could just designate him an enemy combatant and all his rights magically disappear...
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
The nuance may be "the ends don't justify the means".
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
That's why we have due process in the first place. Idealistically, we'd be protecting the rights of everyone, not only the "innocent."
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Bad test case
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2339B
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re:
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Re:
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Now that that is out of the way, As a 'professional" Interrogator I always was aware that lying is hard work, 'cause you gotta keep track of all the lies you tell. Finally Dianne Feinstein did We The People a favor by defending her unconstitutional position on the NSA.
I don't care if 100 terrorists get off scot-free if our government had to lie and violate the constitution to get them convicted in the first place
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Collecting evidence is collecting evidence
Methinks not.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Collecting evidence is collecting evidence
The show is on the other foot. Because at this point, you cannot see your NSA file. There in fact is no such file, because everybody's NSA metadata is mashed together "until your government targets you, the citizen, for suspected wrongdoing" (or attempts at collaborating with wrongdoers).
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Let see. Collect-it-all, f. Constitution. Global Dominance, no Plan B.
Then Snowden's info hits the fan.
Should these poeople really have their fingers on nukes as well?
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Whew!
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re: Whew!
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
This situation is akin to supporting hate speech because it fits the concept of free speech.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
The fact remains that we are no longer a nation of laws, just a bunch of greedy, pistol packing punks. The terrorists will win? It sure sounds like they already have.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
Re:
For the government the difference is whether they think supporting the organization is a benefit to them or not regardless of what the organization's methods are or are not.
[ link to this | view in chronology ]
About me
Hi guys, I work as a content manager in a cool institution for the development of the gaming industry, in my free time I like football and I love to play gambling at https://greatcasinocanada.com
[ link to this | view in chronology ]