Washington – Justice Dept. Urges Surveillance Court Not To Release Opinions

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    File photo of President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder at the West Front Lawn of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, USA, 15 May 2013. EPA/Olivier Douliery Washington – The Obama administration on Friday urged a secret U.S. court that oversees surveillance programs to reject a request by a civil liberties group to see court opinions used to underpin a massive phone records database.

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    Justice Department lawyers said in papers filed in the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that the court’s opinions are a unique exception to the wide access the public typically has to court records in the United States.

    If the public had a right to any opinion from the surveillance court, the possible harms would be “real and significant, and, quite frankly, beyond debate,” the lawyers wrote, citing earlier rulings from the court.

    The American Civil Liberties Union had asked the court last month to release some of its opinions after Britain’s Guardian newspaper revealed a massive U.S. government database of daily telephone call data, prompting a worldwide debate about the program’s legality.

    The Guardian’s report was based on a document provided by fugitive former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, since charged criminally with leaking U.S. government secrets. Snowden is believed to be at an airport in Moscow, his U.S. passport having been revoked by Washington.

    To justify the database, U.S. officials point to a provision of the U.S. Patriot Act that requires companies to turn over “tangible things,” although before the Guardian’s report it was not publicly known that the Justice Department and the surveillance court interpreted the term to mean entire databases in bulk.

    Some U.S. senators had said in 2011 that Americans would be stunned and alarmed if they knew how the government was interpreting parts of the Patriot Act.

    Although the Justice Department said the surveillance court should not grant the ACLU’s request, it wrote that the court is free to release opinions on its own under certain rules. The government is considering declassifying yet more records to help the public understand the surveillance programs, it added.


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    5 Comments
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    Israel-T
    Israel-T
    10 years ago

    No comments? Is this the Soviet Union?

    iamoverhere
    iamoverhere
    10 years ago

    i thought this was going to be the most open administration, no secrets,
    I GUESS THEY LIED ABOUT THAT ALSO

    how do you know when the regime is lying?-
    it seems that whenever they start talking, it always to cover up another lie, another scandal………………..

    10 years ago

    Something is highly questionable when the citizens have zero privacy, but the government that collects these reams of data is allowed to keep their activities secret. Sounds more dictatorial every day. Now, who are the goons that keep denying that Obama is pushing this country to socialism?

    AlbertEinstein
    AlbertEinstein
    10 years ago

    The dinim of privacy and open government are not yehoreg v’al ya’avor.

    If people’s lives are in jeopardy – which they are in this case – then the Government should NOT release the information.

    10 years ago

    see what happened to Egypt’s Mursi when 2 million people demonstrated