FISA courts dismantled just in time
By Marlene Lang, Daily Southtown, August 12, 2007
http://www.dailysouthtown.com/news/lang/504761,121LNG1.article
What if you or I could secretly commit crimes against our fellow
citizens, bury the evidence of the crime by stamping it "TOP
SECRET," refuse to answer questions when we are accused of
committing the crime, and then, before we can be prosecuted for
the crime, we can make a law that says the crime we committed is
no longer a crime. And then call ourselves heroes.
Welcome to the New America.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act has required, since
1978, that government agents obtain a warrant before spying on
Americans. A special system of courts was set up to hear the
reasons such spying was necessary, with judges granting the
warrants under rather lenient conditions. The feds were allowed,
when granted a warrant, to listen in on international phone
calls; a later provision included electronic communications: It
was simple accountability, based on the Fourth Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution.
One week ago, the FISA court system was effectively set aside by
your president and his sneaky administration, in the name of
keeping you safe.
Bush's National Security Administration was accused in 2005 of
listening in on the international calls of Americans, without
getting warrants first. Two American attorneys for an Islamic
charity organization have since sued the administration, armed
with a log of their calls -- inadvertently released and copied
-- despite the TOP SECRET stamp on every page. Their case is to
be heard in federal court in San Francisco on Aug. 15.
What to do? The Bush administration had asked the court to
dismiss the case altogether, then claimed it could not defend
itself in such a lawsuit, because to do so, it would have to
give up information that would threaten national security. In
the New America, there seems to be no constitutional tromping
that cannot be justified in the name of national security.
But, just a nose ahead of the first serious legal challenge to
the NSA's spying program, Bush signed a law on Aug. 5 that
revamps the NSA program, broadening the spy scope, making it all
legal.
The handy new law allows international surveillance by means of
fiber optic cable -- the medium of most international
communication today -- and best of all, without a warrant. Who
needs the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act?
It was a tricky move. The FISA law had not yet caught up with
technology. But suddenly, it was a matter of great urgency, even
though the administration had been stretching the spirit of the
law and abusing advances in technology to get around the letter
of the law, for years. These acrobatics will no longer be
necessary.
The FISA courts have been stripped of any real oversight; the
attorney general and the director of national intelligence will
now approve international surveillance. There will be no
examining of the individuals being spied upon, to decide if the
surveillance is reasonable. Director of National Intelligence
Mike McConnell called it "modernizing" FISA, and graciously
submitted to post-surveillance "reviews."
McConnell assures us the new law's targets will be foreigners,
not Americans.
So, relax. You can trust the Administration of the Freely
Reigning Executive never to abuse or stretch the limits of its
power. Or, you can stay off the phone with your friends
overseas.
Daily Southtown columnist Marlene Lang can be reached at
blackbirdlang@yahoo.com "
mailto:blackbirdlang@yahoo.com="">blackbirdlang@yahoo.com">blackbirdlang@yahoo.com
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