SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Baldur Fjvlnisson who wrote (290209)8/25/2002 4:27:27 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) of 769670
 
It just gets scary by the day....and thank the Constitution that there are SOME in power that just are not buying this police state under Ashcroft!.....
Secret Court May Limit Government Power to Spy on Domestic Terror
By Anne Gearan
Associated Press | Boston Globe

Friday, 23 August, 2002

WASHINGTON (AP) The Bush administration's latest courtroom setback in the post-Sept. 11 hunt for
terrorists came from an unlikely source: a secretive panel of federal judges that until now had always given
the government what it wanted.

The rebuff by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court may test the limits of the government's power
to spy on terror suspects in the United States, and prompted a strongly worded appeal from the
government.

The Justice Department released an edited version of the appeal Friday, minus the details about a
secret international terrorism investigation.

It apparently was the first time the government has gone to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of
Review to overrule the special espionage panel, created nearly 25 years ago as a check on the
government's power to conduct domestic spying.

''It's a shock, and a reminder of something the attorney general in particular seems to need reminding
on that there is another branch of government here that has more than an advisory role to play,'' said Peter
Raven-Hansen, who teaches national security law at George Washington University.

Judges have clipped the government's wings in a handful of rulings in recent months dealing with secret
detentions and deportations of potential terror suspects and rules for holding or prosecuting those whose
names are public.

The intelligence court's ruling, like those in other recent cases, takes issue with the government's
assertion that national security concerns justify some lessening of previously recognized civil liberties or
privacy rights, lawyers said.

''They have overreached and they have not been sufficiently sensitive to legal requirements,''
Raven-Hansen said. ''If you've been accustomed to win-win-win, you tend to forget there's a legal structure
that is being applied.''

The legal structure at issue in this case involves the court that assesses the legitimacy of Justice
Department and FBI requests to spy on people suspected of foreign espionage inside U.S. borders.

''For years the court never turned down an application, but my sense is that was not because the court
was a rubber stamp,'' said Robert Turner, associate director of the Center for National Security Law at the
University of Virginia. Instead, he said, it forced government lawyers to heed the legal restrictions.

The court has been a valuable filter, ensuring that FBI agents had proper legal justification for installing
wiretaps or other electronic surveillance, or for conducting clandestine searches of the homes or property of
espionage suspects, Turner and others said.

The court rejected a wiretap request in May, saying the government had previously misled the court or
provided bad information and suggesting the government was now seeking power that would allow it to
misuse intelligence information for criminal prosecutions. This was revealed Thursday by the Senate
Judiciary Committee.

The court was ''plainly wrong'' in turning down the request, Justice Department lawyers wrote in the
appeal dated Wednesday and released Friday.

The court misinterpreted the law governing such domestic investigations and ignored the breadth of new
surveillance powers Congress granted to investigators immediately after the Sept. 11 jetliner attacks, the
Justice Department wrote.

In passing the new law enforcement powers known as the USA Patriot Act, Congress recognized ''that
the country and its people can no longer afford a fragmented, blinkered, compartmentalized response to
international terrorism and espionage,'' the government lawyers wrote.

The case involves an ongoing investigation by both anti-terrorism agents and criminal investigators. The
government wanted to conduct electronic surveillance of an unidentified person, and make the information
available for both national security and law enforcement uses.

''The consultations envisioned in this case are all intended to coordinate these intelligence and law
enforcement efforts to investigate and protect against international terrorism,'' the Justice Department wrote.

It is unclear whether the case involves any suspected links to al-Qaida.

Separately, the House Judiciary Committee's top Democrat rebuked the Justice Department over the
espionage court ruling.

''What your department suggested, and the court properly rejected, was the idea that absent probable
cause that a crime has been committed, a law enforcement official could direct our nation's spies to
conduct surveillance on someone they claim is a criminal suspect,'' Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., wrote
Friday to Attorney General John Ashcroft.
CC
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext