Judge Orders DOJ To Hand Over FISA Court's Justification For Bulk Data Collection On Americans In FOIA Lawsuit
from the this-could-get-interesting dept
Late Friday, a judge in California ordered the DOJ to hand over key rulings from the FISA Court concerning the legality of the bulk records collection under Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act. As you probably know by now, Section 215 is the "business records" provision, that the government claims allows the NSA to collect phone and other records on all communications in the US (despite the fact that the law itself is limited to the FBI and is only supposed to be about records related to terrorism). The FISA Court, however, has broadly (mis)interpreted the law, but done so in secret, such that the NSA now believes it can get basically any phone record (and lots of other kinds of records as well). The EFF filed a lawsuit after its attempt to get access to the relevant FISA Court interpretations (five of 'em) was denied, and the judge is now ordering the DOJ to let them see the rulings in question, after a heavily redacted deposition wasn't satisfying enough. The ruling is worth reading. The judge basically says that the DOJ has very little credibility on these things, having withheld info it should have released in the past.Here, the Court finds that an in camera inspection of the subject documents is warranted. The evidence in the record shows that some documents, previously withheld in the course of this litigation and now declassified, had been withheld in their entirety when a disclosure of reasonably segregable portions of those documents would have been required. Further, the withholding followed an Order from this Court expressing concern that the agency had failed to explain sufficiently why the withheld documents “would be so replete with descriptions of intelligence activities, sources and methods that no portions thereof would contain” reasonably segregable and producible, non-exempt information....Of course, there's no guarantee that the judge will release the actual rulings, but this is clearly a step in the right direction.
Further, the Court finds that the public’s interest in the documents withheld is significant. The scope and legality of the government’s current surveillance practices of broad swaths of its citizenry is a topic of intense public interest and concern.... In light of this public interest, in camera review to assure that the agency is complying with its obligations to disclose non-exempt material is certainly merited. Finally, as the parties have narrowed the range of documents for review, the burden on judicial resources is not significant.
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Filed Under: bulk records, doj, domestic surveillance, fisa court, fisc, foia, nsa, patriot act, section 215
Companies: eff
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Laws cannot be secret in a Democracy, Republic, or whatever we have. Secret Laws are anti-democratic by definition.
Also, in order for "ignorance of the law is no excuse [for committing a crime]" to work, the People MUST know (or at least have a reliable means of finding out) what EVERY Law is, AND what those Laws are thought to mean by those enforcing them. If someone CAN'T know the Law, they are ignorant of the Law, & if they can't know the Law, how are they expected to avoid violating it?
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That gets denied for a plainly BS excuse. Then another, another, next thing you know all types of people are asking for what is hidden.
This administration and the DOJ have particularly rode the stonewalling to it's very end. Now you have judges questioning the validity of items hidden.
Soon or later everyone catches on and then the court cases start, just as DOJ has pretty much demanded of anything it deems sensitive and has been known to be overly paranoid about what it reveals.
We are seeing the knocking on the door of disassembling some of the stonewalling and the issues of spying on it's own people. The crack in the door is there and given enough time it will be opened.
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Hope the judge has a lot of patience
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Data Trickle Down Theory
One of those alphabet agencies just got away with destroying evidence no to long ago.
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'Well sure we'll get you those documents... just as soon as we can find them. Funniest thing, we seem to have misplaced them, and forgot to write down where we put the things, might take a while to figure out just where they're located, say, a couple of years or so, maybe more?'
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And then the next time comes, and they repeat the same empty threats.
Given that, it's not hard to see why the various agencies show a complete and utter lack of respect for the courts, the judges are either toothless or cowards, and both sides know it.
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"Ignorance of the law is no excuse." Yet that's exactly what's happening in America today. Citizens are being charge under secret laws and in secret court sessions. Without even being able to understand the laws being used to imprison them.
It's tyrannical justice! There's no denying it.
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i'm not talking about legality, so much as i'm talking about the USA being a modern, civilized, nation. stuff like that doesn't strike me as anything of the sort.
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Not it's not.
It is being run by idiots with lots of money.
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That's a burrito. Whole enchilada. Full wrap to tap. Round doughnut with the munchkin. Eat up.
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