Ruling for the Law
The New York Times | Editorial
Friday 18 August 2006
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/081906A.shtml
Ever since President Bush was forced to admit that he was spying
on Americans' telephone calls and email without warrants, his
lawyers have fought to keep challenges to the program out of the
courts. Yesterday, that plan failed. A federal judge in Detroit
declared the eavesdropping program to be illegal and
unconstitutional. She also offered a scathing condemnation of
what lies behind the wiretapping - Mr. Bush's attempt to expand
his powers to the point that he can place himself beyond the
reach of Congress, judges or the Constitution.
"There are no hereditary kings in America and no powers not
created by the Constitution," wrote Judge Anna Diggs Taylor of
the United States District Court in Detroit. Her decision was
based on a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.
She said Mr. Bush violated the 1978 Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act when he ordered the National Security Agency to
spy without a warrant on international phone calls and e-mail by
Americans and foreign residents of the United States. She noted
that the surveillance law was passed to prohibit just this sort
of presidential abuse of power and provided ample flexibility
for gathering vital intelligence. She also said that the program
violated the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable
searches and seizures, as well as the rights of free speech and
association granted by the First Amendment.
The ruling eviscerated the absurd notion on which the
administration's arguments have been based: that Congress
authorized Mr. Bush to do whatever he thinks is necessary when
it authorized the invasion of Afghanistan.
It's good news that this ruling exists at all. Mr. Bush's
lawyers tried to have the entire suit thrown out on national
security grounds, a tactic they have used in an alarming number
of cases. In one particularly appalling example, they persuaded
federal judges to refuse to hear a lawsuit filed by an innocent
German citizen of Lebanese birth who was snatched out of his
private life, illegally imprisoned for five months and tortured
by American jailers.
In this case, the administration told Judge Taylor that merely
arguing its case would expose top secret information. Judge
Taylor said she had reviewed the secret material and concluded
it was not relevant. The secrecy claim, she said, was
"disingenuous and without merit."
No sooner had this ruling been issued than Mr. Bush's loyalists
in Congress, who have been searching for ways to give legal
cover to an illegal spying program, began calling for new laws
to overcome Judge Taylor's objections. Republicans quickly
pointed out that Judge Taylor was appointed by President Jimmy
Carter and that some of the many precedents she cited were
written by liberal judges. These efforts to undermine Judge
Taylor's arguments will undoubtedly continue while the White
House appeals the decision, and the outcome in the conservative
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals is uncertain.
But for now, with a careful, thoroughly grounded opinion, one
judge in Michigan has done what 535 members of Congress have so
abysmally failed to do. She has reasserted the rule of law over
a lawless administration and shown why issues of this kind
belong within the constitutional process created more than two
centuries ago to handle them.
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