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www.house.gov/judiciary , Sat May 13
15:50
SEE LAWSUIT: NSA SPYING
http://www.house.gov/judiciary_democrats/nsaamicumbrief5906.pdf
Questions Raised for Phone Giants in Spy Data Furor By John
Markoff The New York Times Saturday 13 May 2006 The former chief
executive of Qwest, the nation's fourth-largest phone company,
rebuffed government requests...
more
see lawsuit
http://www.house.gov/judiciary_democrats/nsaamicumbrief5906.pdf
Questions Raised for Phone Giants in Spy Data Furor
By John Markoff
The New York Times
Saturday 13 May 2006
The former chief executive of Qwest, the nation's fourth-largest
phone company, rebuffed government requests for the company's
calling records after 9/11 because of "a disinclination on the
part of the authorities to use any legal process," his lawyer
said yesterday.
The statement on behalf of the former Qwest executive, Joseph P.
Nacchio, followed a report that the other big phone companies -
AT&T, BellSouth and Verizon - had complied with an effort by the
National Security Agency to build a vast database of calling
records, without warrants, to increase its surveillance
capabilities after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Those companies insisted yesterday that they were vigilant about
their customers' privacy, but did not directly address their
cooperation with the government effort, which was reported on
Thursday by USA Today. Verizon said that it provided customer
information to a government agency "only where authorized by law
for appropriately defined and focused purposes," but that it
could not comment on any relationship with a national security
program that was "highly classified."
Legal experts said the companies faced the prospect of lawsuits
seeking billions of dollars in damages over cooperation in the
program, citing communications privacy legislation stretching
back to the 1930's. A federal lawsuit was filed in Manhattan
yesterday seeking as much as $50 billion in civil damages
against Verizon on behalf of its subscribers.
For a second day, there was political fallout on Capitol Hill,
where Senate Democrats intend to use next week's confirmation
hearings for a new C.I.A. director to press the Bush
administration on its broad surveillance programs.
As senior lawmakers in Washington vowed to examine the phone
database operation and possibly issue subpoenas to the telephone
companies, executives at some of the companies said they would
comply with requests to appear on Capitol Hill but stopped short
of describing how much would be disclosed, at least in public
sessions.
"If Congress asks us to appear, we will appear," said Selim
Bingol, a spokesman at AT&T. "We will act within the laws and
rules that apply."
Qwest was apparently alone among the four major telephone
companies to have resisted the requests to cooperate with the
government effort. A statement issued on behalf of Mr. Nacchio
yesterday by his lawyer, Herbert J. Stern, said that after the
government's first approach in the fall of 2001, "Mr. Nacchio
made inquiry as to whether a warrant or other legal process had
been secured in support of that request."
"When he learned that no such authority had been granted, and
that there was a disinclination on the part of the authorities
to use any legal process," Mr. Nacchio concluded that the
requests violated federal privacy requirements "and issued
instructions to refuse to comply."
The statement said the requests continued until Mr. Nacchio left
in June 2002. His departure came amid accusations of fraud at
the company, and he now faces federal charges of insider
trading.
The database reportedly assembled by the security agency from
calling records has dozens of fields of information, including
called and calling numbers and the duration of calls, but
nothing related to the substance of the calls. But it could
permit what intelligence analysts and commercial data miners
refer to as "link analysis," a statistical technique for
investigators to identify calling patterns in a seemingly
impenetrable mountain of digital data.
The law governing the release of phone company data has been
modified repeatedly to grapple with changing computer and
communications technologies that have increasingly bedeviled law
enforcement agencies. The laws include the Communications Act,
first passed in 1934, and a variety of provisions of the
Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, including the Stored
Communications Act, passed in 1986.
Wiretapping - actually listening to phone calls - has been
tightly regulated by these laws. But in general, the laws have
set a lower legal standard required by the government to obtain
what has traditionally been called pen register or
trap-and-trace information - calling records obtained when
intelligence and police agencies attached a specialized device
to subscribers' telephone lines.
Those restrictions still hold, said a range of legal scholars,
in the face of new computer databases with decades' worth of
calling records. AT&T created such technology during the 1990's
for use in fraud detection and has previously made such
information available to law enforcement with proper warrants.
Orin Kerr, a former federal prosecutor and assistant professor
at George Washington University, said his reading of the
relevant statutes put the phone companies at risk for at least
$1,000 per person whose records they disclosed without a court
order.
"This is not a happy day for the general counsels" of the phone
companies, he said. "If you have a class action involving 10
million Americans, that's 10 million times $1,000 - that's 10
billion."
The New Jersey lawyers who filed the federal suit against
Verizon in Manhattan yesterday, Bruce Afran and Carl Mayer, said
they would consider filing suits against BellSouth and AT&T in
other jurisdictions.
"This is almost certainly the largest single intrusion into
American civil liberties ever committed by any U.S.
administration," Mr. Afran said. "Americans expect their phone
records to be private. That's our bedrock governing principle of
our phone system." In addition to damages, the suit seeks an
injunction against the security agency to stop the collection of
phone numbers.
Several legal experts cited ambiguities in the laws that may be
used by the government and the phone companies to defend the
National Security Agency program.
"There's a loophole," said Mark Rasch, the former head of
computer-crime investigations for the Justice Department and now
the senior vice president of Solutionary, a computer security
company. "Records of phones that have called each other without
identifying information are not covered by any of these laws."
Civil liberties lawyers were quick to dispute that claim.
"This is an incredible red herring," said Kevin Bankston, a
lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a privacy rights
group that has sued AT&T over its cooperation with the
government, including access to calling records. "There is no
legal process that contemplates getting entire databases of
data."
The group sued AT&T in late January, contending that the company
was violating the law by giving the government access to its
customer call record data and permitting the agency to tap its
Internet network. The suit followed reports in The New York
Times in December that telecommunications companies had
cooperated with such government requests without warrants.
A number of industry executives pointed to the national climate
in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks to explain why phone
companies might have risked legal entanglement in cooperating
with the requests for data without warrants.
An AT&T spokesman said yesterday that the company had gotten
some calls and e-mail messages about the news reports, but
characterized the volume as "not heavy" and said there were
responses on both sides of the issue.
Reaction around the country also appeared to be divided.
Cathy Reed, 45, a wealth manager from Austin, Tex., who was
visiting Boston, said she did not see a problem with the
government's reviewing call logs. "I really don't think it
matters," she said. "I bet every credit card company already has
them."
Others responded critically. Pat Randall, 63, a receptionist at
an Atlanta high-rise, said, "Our phone conversations are just
personal, and to me, the phone companies that cooperated, I
think we should move our phone services to the company that did
not cooperate."
While the telephone companies have both business contracts and
regulatory issues before the federal government, executives in
the industry yesterday dismissed the notion that they felt
pressure to take part in any surveillance programs. The small
group of executives with the security clearance necessary to
deal with the government on such matters, they said, are
separate from the regulatory and government contracting
divisions of the companies.
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Reporting for this article was contributed by Ken Belson, Brenda
Goodman, Stephen Labaton, Matt Richteland Katie Zezima.