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Government Seeks Dismissal of Spy Suit

The Wired blog 27B Stroke 6 is carrying the news that the US has filed a motion to drop the case the ACLU won in lower court against the government's warrantless wiretapping program. The government's appeal of that ruling will be heard on Wednesday, January 31 in front of the Sixth Circuit court of appeals. The feds argue that the case is now moot because they are now obtaining warrants from the FISA court, and furthermore President Bush did not renew the warrantless program. Turns out there's a Supreme Court precedent saying that if you were doing something illegal, get taken to court, and then stop the illegal activity, you're not off the hook. The feds argue in their petition that this precedent does not apply to them. Here is the government's filing (PDF).

15 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. So lets see if I have this chain of events right: by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Funny

    Court: You were spying and that's a very bad thing.
    Governmnet: Yea but we stopped after we were sued.
    Court: Yes, but that doesn't get you off the hook.
    Government: Hey look! Behind you! A two headed moose!
    Court: *Whrils around* Where? Where? I demand to know where!
    Government: *Runs away*

    Now IANAL, but that sounds like a reasonable summary to me.

    --
    I hate printers.
  2. What a difference a Congress makes. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, before, it was necessary and legal and there was absolutely nothing wrong with it and whomever leaked the information on it was a traitor.

    Now, it's back to the Court and warrants are being issued and there's no need to take this to the SCOTUS because we're not doing anything illegal ... now.

    Just for that reason this MUST be seen by the SCOTUS.

    This is still a Democracy.

  3. it's like by micktaggart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    being taken to court after you beat wife, but then claim the court case should be thrown out because you haven't beaten her since the court case started.

  4. Not FISA court approval by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not done under the FISA program, he's trying to confuse the judge. What they did was they got 1 FISA judge to declare the whole program legal, not case by case with probable cause, not a FISA court ruling, a ruling of a single FISA judge.

    An actual legal FISA warrant is done case by case:

    Each application
    for a surveillance order must include, inter alia:

    1) the identity of the federal officer making
    the application;

    2) the authority conferred on the Attorney
    General by the President of the United States
    and the approval of the Attorney General to
    make the application;

    3) the identity, if known, or a description of
    the target of the electronic surveillance;

    4) a statement of the facts and circumstances
    relied upon by the applicant to justify his
    belief that . . . the target of the electronic surveillance
    is a foreign power or an agent of a
    foreign power . . . [and] each of the facilities
    or places [to be subjected to the surveillance]
    . . . is being used, or is about to be used, by a
    foreign power or an agent of a foreign power;

    5) a statement of the proposed minimization
    procedures;

    6) a detailed description of the nature of the
    information sought and the type of communications
    or activities to be subjected to the surveillance;
    [and]

    7) a certification [from an appropriate executive
    branch official] . . . that the certifying
    official deems the information sought to be
    foreign intelligence information . . . that the
    purpose of the surveillance is to obtain foreign
    intelligence information . . . that such
    information cannot reasonably be obtained
    by normal investigative techniques . . . .

    http://fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fisa/sojudge.pdf

    1. Re:Not FISA court approval by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Informative

      "What they did was they got 1 FISA judge to declare the whole program legal,"

      Yay, a general warrant! We don't need no stinking Fourth Amendment!

  5. Re:So lets see if I have this chain of events righ by nietsch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So you say that because the republican part of your olichargy holds more than 1 third of the seat (one of them always will in your two party system) the president can order the gouvernment all illegal things he likes, because congress could never impeach him.
    So how are your militias going? It is time to feed the tree of freedom, and I nominate every congrescritter that opposes impeaching BabyBush.

    --
    This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
  6. Gotta remember this by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really. If I ever get caught in, say, a murder, I just stop killing anyone and I'm free.

    Right?

    Oh, wait. Doesn't that mean Bush should also stop hunting Bin Laden? I mean, he hasn't crashed any airliners into skycrapers for years now.

    The mind boggles trying to follow what passes for "reason" in your government. I once thought Bush is stupid. I don't do that anymore. I think he has some unknown insanity that is contagious.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  7. If they win by Hennell · · Score: 5, Interesting

    would this mean that all file sharing would be fine, as long you delete your file sharing software and promise to not do it anymore if they try to prosecute you?

  8. Power Company by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This logic is the essence of the Bush Era. The theory is entirely devoted to power. All that matters in life is to whom you defer in power. If Bush acknowledges that a court, a Congress, or a TV audience has any power over him, that's the end of the issue. Only after an apocalyptic fight with every resource possible, including illegal means, torture, spies, assassinations, exposing covert agents, bribes, anything to attack the force asserting power over them. Then, when it looks like the new power will win, they try to bargain for changes to allow them to do what they were doing in exchange for admitting they used to do it, then claim "we were right all along". If they still lose, they take whatever lumps are offered (until now, practically nothing except perhaps purely symbolic, from their Republican Congress), then just do it anyway in secret - or through proxies, either corporate or overseas.

    Because all that BushCo has learned from politics is the Nixon philosophy "it's only a crime when you get caught". Because the Bush admin made its bones in the Nixon admin.

    These people will do anything for tyrannical powers, including use ones they don't actually have to get them. The Constitution is designed to stop such criminal tyrants: impeachment. It works only while the Constitution still has more power than the tyrants attacking it.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  9. Re:So lets see if I have this chain of events righ by digitalunity · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I hope not. Their entire argument is flawed. And I quote, from their filing:

    Nor, as we have shown, is there any "reasonable expectation" that the complained-of harm from the TSP might recur


    I take particular conflict with this statement. The fed's continued assertion that the program was lawful without FISA approval shows that they can, and will use this 'constitutional authority' again as the perceived need arises. On that basis alone, the balance of prejudice against state secrets powers, constitutional power of the executive brach during times of war and mootness versus the right of the people to use the last check in the federal system to prevent future harm is highly in favor of letting the case proceed.
    --
    You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
  10. Re:So lets see if I have this chain of events righ by misanthrope101 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yeah, even without watching the news I know that the Democrats must've won an election somewhere, because all of a sudden I'm seeing that Jefferson "tree of liberty" patriot quote again. Odd that imprisonment without trial+torture+warrantless surveillance=absolute indifference, but now all of a sudden sweet liberty is being gang-raped by a D congress. I know that isn't your point and you were being satirical. just got me thinking about something I haven't seen since Clinton was in office--Republicans saying that government is dangerous to freedom. I know they're lying and they don't actually believe it, but it's funny to hear it again all of a sudden. Brings me back to my days of furiously reading James Bovard and thinking that Randy Weaver and Waco had convinced the Republicans that you shouldn't trust government. Yeah, I was stupid.

  11. Re:Section D of the government filing by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 4, Informative
    You are correct. No court or judge has the power to issue such a blanket authorization.

    The Fourth Ammendment:

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  12. Study of Kafka by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is the same trial, I think, in which one of the lawyers for the plaintiffs said he was studying Kafka as a refresher course on bizarre legal proceedings.

    If the only goal of the plaintiffs was to seek an end of the government's wiretapping activities, then the government's request would not be illogical. One of the major disadvantages of the Common Law system is that it is so laborious and costly that only a minority of cases can actually be decided in court. Stopping a procedure to achieve a goal that is already achieved, would save time and money.

    Unfortunately for the government, one of the plaintiffs is seeking civil damages, because documents that got accidentally in the "wrong" hands, revealed that it was being illegally spied upon. And this damages part of the trial clearly cannot be avoided by simply stopping the snooping, as it applies to the past. The US government's position on this appears to be that it cannot be prosecuted because all evidence against it is secret (how convenient) and should never have been seen by the plaintiffs, their lawyers, or the court. It did not yet file a formal request to have any memory of it erased from their minds, but I am sure that is only because they lack the technology, not because they have an scruples about it.

    This, of course, is only the civil side of the issue. I think possible criminal prosecution is still open regardless of what is decided in this case, although it may have to wait for the end of the Bush administration.

    As far as I remember, in some Italian republics of the Renaissance government officials were sent to court automatically after the end of their tenure. They had to account for their actions in office and clear their names of accusations of abuse of power. Maybe that is a system the USA should be considering again.

  13. Re:So lets see if I have this chain of events righ by mrseth · · Score: 5, Informative

    > Using it as an excuse for ex post facto warrants and attempts at all encompssing listening systems should not be tolerated.

    It is my understanding of FISA that getting a warrant after the fact is perfectly legal if the warrant is obtained within 72 hours. The Bush administration refused to even do that! The reason FISA exists is so that someone outside the administration (i.e., at least one federal judge) is aware of who and what is being wiretapped and will hopefully keep them from abusing the power of the intelligence services as had been the case from WWII to Watergate. During the 1960's the government was spying on the likes of Martin Luther King, Vietnam War protesters, and many others who did not warrant it. The government even had the audacity to attempt to use the information gathered about King to coerce him to commit suicide.

  14. Re:So lets see if I have this chain of events righ by morleron · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I certainly hope that the judges hearing the appeal (and the Supremes when it gets to them) have the intestinal fortitude to assert their authority. The problem with this whole case is that the Bush administraation does whatever it wants regardless of the law. A President who had any respect for the Constitution and the rule of law would never have started this program in the first place. The fact that Bush and his co-conspirators have decided to stop this program tells me that they have simply started another one somewhere within the government's huge espionage sector. They are indeed trying to remove themselves and their actions from scrutiny so that they can carry on as they want over in the dark corners of the room.

    I have no confidence that Bush will obey any adverse ruling that comes out of this case. After all, to do so would undermine the "unitary executive" theory of government upon which he bases his dictatorial actions. I suspect that, in the back of his little twisted mind, he thinks he's immune to actions by the other branches of government. After all, "How many divisions does the Supreme Court have?" In the final analysis it's only the willingness of each branch of government to abide by decisions made by another that makes our form of government work. With his signing statements Bush has repeatedly demonstrated that only he, as the "unitary executive", will make the determination of how a law is to be interpreted or enforced. The Attorney General has recently stated in Senate hearings that the civil liberties embodied in our Constitution do not apply all the time: http://www.lewrockwell.com/eddlem/eddlem14.html. Given that mindset there is nothing to prevent this President from deciding that he is not subject to rulings of the courts and I'm sure that he will have no problem getting a ruling to that effect from his AG and others in his administration.

    This country is facing a Constitutional crisis that makes the Watergate affair pale by comparison. Between a President who believes that he is not bound by the rule of law and willingly believes whatever twisted interpretation of same will allow him to achieve his ends while appearing to act within the law and a Congress whose members have, by and large, stood by while he has shredded most of the Consitution we have arrived at this point. President Bush has been allowed to carry out whatever course of action he wants, be it the suspension of habeus corpus, torture, secret imprisonment, warrantless wiretapping, etc. with nothing of substance being done to stop him. Indeed, the Congress has abetted him by passing such legislation as the PATRIOT ACT, the Military Commissions Act of 2006, and the Anti-Torture Act of 2005 (which merely formalized AG Gonzales' interpretation of what constitutes torture, essentially allowing anything short of causing death). All he has had to do is to cloak himself in the flag and claim that Patriotism and a desire to "keep America safe" justify his actions. Congress is as much a part of this travesty as he is and the decision by the new Democratic leadership to "take impeachment off the table" can only have strengthened his view of the correctness of his actions. There is still some hope that our course can be reversed, but doing so will require a concerted effort by the Congress, the Courts, and the People to achieve it. Let's hope that the courts don't let us down and that they allow this suit to go forward. At least it would be a start.

    Just my $.02,
    Ron

    --
    Impeach Barack Obama for violating the Constitutional requirement to be a "natural born" citizen to hold the office of P