Senate Passes Unconstitutional Spying Bill And Grants Sweeping Immunity To Phone Companies (7/9/2008)
ACLU Announces Legal Challenge To
Follow President’s Signature FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (202) 675-2312, media@dcaclu.org or
(212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON – Today, in a blatant assault upon
civil liberties and the right to privacy, the Senate passed an unconstitutional
domestic spying bill that violates the Fourth Amendment and eliminates any
meaningful role for judicial oversight of government surveillance. The FISA
Amendments Act of 2008 was approved by a vote of 69 to 28 and is
expected to be signed into law by President Bush shortly. This bill essentially
legalizes the president’s unlawful warrantless wiretapping program revealed in
December 2005 by the New York Times.
“Once
again, Congress blinked and succumbed to the president’s fear-mongering. With
today’s vote, the government has been given a green light to expand its power to
spy on Americans and run roughshod over the Constitution,” said Anthony D.
Romero, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “This
legislation will give the government unfettered and unchecked access to innocent
Americans’ international communications without a warrant. This is not only
unconstitutional, but absolutely un-American.”
The FISA
Amendments Act nearly eviscerates oversight of government surveillance by
allowing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) to review only
general procedures for spying rather than individual warrants. The FISC will not
be told any specifics about who will actually be wiretapped, thereby
undercutting any meaningful role for the court and violating the Fourth
Amendment’s protection against unreasonable search and seizure.
The bill
further trivializes court review by authorizing the government to continue a
surveillance program even after the government’s general spying procedures are
found insufficient or unconstitutional by the FISC. The government has the
authority to wiretap through the entire appeals process, and then keep and use
whatever information was gathered in the meantime. A provision touted as a major
“concession” by proponents of the bill calls for investigations by the
inspectors general of four agencies overseeing spying activities. But members of
Congress who do not sit on the Judiciary or Intelligence committees will not be
guaranteed access to the agencies’ reports.
The bill
essentially grants absolute retroactive immunity to telecommunication companies
that facilitated the president’s warrantless wiretapping program over the last
seven years by ensuring the dismissal of court cases pending against those
companies. The test for the companies’ right to immunity is not whether the
government certifications they acted on were actually legal – only whether they
were issued. Because it is public knowledge that certifications were issued, all
of the pending cases will be summarily dismissed. This means Americans may never
learn the truth about what the companies and the government did with our private
communications.
“With one
vote, Congress has strengthened the executive branch, weakened the judiciary and
rendered itself irrelevant,” said Caroline
Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office. “This bill – soon to be law – is a constitutional nightmare. Americans
should know that if this legislation is enacted and upheld, what they say on
international phone calls or emails is no longer private. The government can
listen in without having a specific reason to do so. Our rights as Americans
have been curtailed and our privacy can no longer be assumed.”
In advance
of the president’s signature, the ACLU announced its plan to challenge the new
law in court.
“This
fight is not over. We intend to challenge this bill as soon as President Bush
signs it into law,” said Jameel Jaffer, Director of the ACLU National Security
Project. “The bill allows the warrantless and dragnet surveillance of
Americans’ international telephone and email communications. It plainly violates
the Fourth Amendment.”
For more
information, go to: www.aclu.org/fisa
# # #
|