U.S. judge says phone surveillance program
likely unlawful
The U.S. government's
gathering of Americans' phone records is likely unlawful, a judge ruled on
Monday, raising "serious doubts" about the value of the National
Security Agency's so-called metadata counter terrorism program.
"I cannot
imagine a more 'indiscriminate' and 'arbitrary invasion' than this systematic
and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every
single citizen," U.S. District Judge Richard Leon, appointed by Republican
President George W. Bush in 2002, wrote in a 68-page ruling.
The U.S. Department
of Justice said it was reviewing the ruling in a case brought by Larry Klayman,
a conservative lawyer, and Charles Strange, described in court documents as the
father of a cryptologist technician for the NSA who was killed inAfghanistan in 2011. The judge
ordered the government to stop collecting data about the two plaintiffs, who
were Verizon Communications Inc customers. Verizon
declined comment.
"We believe the
program is constitutional as previous judges have found," Department of
Justice spokesman Andrew Ames said in a statement.
Leon suspended
enforcement of his injunction against the program "in light of the
significant national security interests at stake in this case and the novelty
of the constitutional issues" pending an expected appeal by the
government. A U.S. official said an appeal was likely.
Leon expressed
skepticism of the program's value, writing that the government could not cite a
single instance in which the bulk data actually stopped an imminent attack.
"I have serious
doubts about the efficacy of the metadata collection program as a means of
conducting time-sensitive investigations in cases involving imminent threats of
terrorism," he wrote.
That is important, he
added, because for the program to be constitutional, the government must show
its effectiveness outweighs privacy interests.
LEAKS
Former NSA contractor
Edward Snowden revealed the massive phone record collection to U.S. and British
media in June. Documents provided by Snowden showed that a U.S. surveillance
court had secretly approved the collection of millions of raw daily phone
records in America, such as the length of calls and the numbers that are
dialed.
Snowden, in a
statement sent by journalist Glenn Greenwald, applauded the ruling.
"I acted on my
belief that the NSA's mass surveillance programs would not withstand a
constitutional challenge, and that the American public deserved a chance to see
these issues determined by open courts," he said. "Today, a secret
program authorized by a secret court was, when exposed to the light of day,
found to violate Americans' rights. It is the first of many."
In its defense, the
NSA says the data collected are key to spotting possible terrorism plots and do
not include the recording of actual phone conversations. Judge Leon wrote,
however, that the program likely violated Americans' right to be free of
unreasonable searches.
Gen. Michael Hayden,
former director of both NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency, said the
metadata made a contribution to weaving the "tapestry of intelligence"
and that judges "are not really in a good position to judge the merits of
intelligence collection programs."
An Obama
administration official said that on 35 occasions in the past, 15 separate
judges assigned to the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance court had
declared bulk communications of telephone metadata lawful.
Judge Leon has issued
headline-making rulings before. In 2011 he blocked cigarette-warning labels
that showed graphic images such as a man with a hole in his throat, saying they
were unlawful compelled speech, and this year he ruled that the Federal Reserve
ignored the intent of Congress in a case about debit card swipe fees.
Greg Nojeim, senior
counsel at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a nonprofit group in
Washington, said the ruling "means that the NSA bulk collection program is
skating on thin constitutional ice."
In defending the data
collection, U.S. Justice Department lawyers have relied in part on a 1979
ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court that said people have little privacy
interest when it comes to records held by a third party such as a phone
company.
Leon wrote that the
latest circumstances were different.
"The government,
in its understandable zeal to protect our homeland, has crafted a counter
terrorism program with respect to telephone metadata that strikes the balance
based in large part on a 34-year-old Supreme Court precedent, the relevance of
which has been eclipsed by technological advances and a cell phone-centric
lifestyle heretofore inconceivable," he wrote.
Greenwald, a former
columnist for The Guardian who wrote about the metadata collection program
based on documents leaked to him by Snowden, praised the court ruling.
"This is a huge
vindication for Edward Snowden and our reporting. Snowden came forward
precisely because he knew that the NSA was secretly violating the
constitutional rights of his fellow citizens, and a federal court ruled today
that this is exactly what has been happening," Greenwald said in an email.
A committee of
experts appointed by the Obama Administration to review NSA activities is
expected to recommend that the spy agency give up collection of masses of
metadata and instead require telephone companies to hold onto it so it can be
searched. But intelligence officials and the phone companies themselves are
said to oppose such a plan.

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