Inquiry into leak of NSA spying program launched
Friday, December 30, 2005; Posted: 2:00 p.m. EST (19:00
GMT)

The headquarters of the National Security Agency holds
some of the government's top secrets.
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/12/30/nsa.leak/
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The Justice Department has opened an
investigation into leaks to the media about the National
Security Agency's classified domestic surveillance
program.
The program authorizes the NSA to eavesdrop on Americans
without first seeking permission from a court for a
search warrant. It has caused a political uproar with
both Democrats and Republicans questioning whether
President Bush went beyond his powers under the U.S.
Constitution in authorizing it.
The New York Times was the first to report the story on
December 16th and then officials confirmed its existence
to CNN and other organizations.
"The Justice Department has opened an investigation of
the unauthorized disclosure of classified information
related to the NSA," a Justice Department official told
CNN.
The leak investigation is expected to be handled, as is
standard, by Justice Department prosecutors and FBI
agents. Officials would not say when the investigation
began.
The New York Times declined to comment on the leak
investigation.
Bush: Eavesdropping legal, necessary
The secret eavesdropping program, which President Bush
authorized shortly after the September 11 attacks,
allows the NSA to intercept domestic communications
without a warrant, as long as one party is outside the
United States.
Bush, who acknowledged the program's existence in a
televised address December 17, says it is essential to
help counterterrorism agents quickly trace the
communications of terror suspects. He called the
disclosure of the program's existence a "shameful act."
(Full story)
"We know that a two-minute phone conversation between
somebody linked to al Qaeda here and an operative
overseas could lead directly to the loss of thousands of
lives," Bush said during a December 19 news conference.
"To save American lives, we must be able to act fast and
to detect these conversations so we can prevent new
attacks."
"It has been effective in disrupting the enemy while
safeguarding our civil liberties," the president added.
Bush, who first authorized the program in early 2002,
said he has renewed the program over 30 times since its
inception and reviews it every 45 days.
Legality questioned
But Democrats and some Republicans have questioned the
legality of the program, and some lawmakers have called
for an independent investigation or congressional
hearings.
The chairman of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee,
Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania, said he intends to hold
hearings early in 2006 into whether the surveillance
program is legal. A spokeswoman for Sen. Specter said
she expected the NSA surveillance hearings to begin as
soon as Judiciary Committee hearings on Supreme Court
nominee Samuel Alito are completed.
Many lawmakers question why the the president did not
get authorization for the wiretaps from a secret court
established by the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA).
"FISA says it's the exclusive law to authorize
wiretaps," Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin
told CNN. "This administration is playing fast and loose
with the law in national security. The issue here is
whether the president of the United States is putting
himself above the law, and I believe he has done so."
Sen. Jack Reed, D-Rhode Island, said the president could
have gone back to a FISA court to get approval even
after the wiretaps started if he was concerned about
speed. "I'm just stunned by the president's rationales
with respect to the illegal wiretapping," Reed said.
"There are two points that have to be emphasized with
respect to the FISA procedure: They're secret and
they're retroactive.
"There is no situation where time is of such an essence
they can't use the FISA proceedings. And so the
president's justification, I think, is without merit."
But Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said the
president's authorization of the program was within his
legal authority.
"There were many people, many lawyers within the
administration who advised the president that he had an
inherent authority as commander-in-chief under the
Constitution to engage in these kind of signals,
intelligence of our enemy," Gonzales said. (Read
Attorney General Gonzales' defense of the secret
wiretaps)
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/12/19/gonzales/index.html
However, former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, who
negotiated the congressional resolution with the White
House, disputes the claim that the authorization to use
force permitted Bush to launch the secret wiretaps
without court authorization. (Full Story)
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/12/23/domestic.spying.ap/index.html
The defense attorneys for several terror suspects
prosecuted by the Justice Department said Wednesday they
might file court motions questioning the legality of the
NSA surveillance project. (Full Story)
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/12/28/lawyers.spying/index.html
CNN's Kevin Bohn and Brian Blank contributed to this
report.