EFF Sues NSA, President Bush, and VP Cheney
VisualE writes "The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) will file a lawsuit against the National Security Agency (NSA) and other government agencies today on behalf of AT&T customers to stop the illegal, unconstitutional, and ongoing dragnet surveillance of their communications and communications records.
The five individual plaintiffs are also suing President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Cheney's chief of staff David Addington, former Attorney General and White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales and other individuals who ordered or participated in the warrantless domestic surveillance."
Is this lawsuit any different from the ACLU one though? They seem to be covering the same ground.
I bring nothing to the table.
Unfortunately you are probably at least a little right. Hopefully something will come out in discovery though. Often even the most secretive and closed off agencies have poor controls on what they will release during discovery, maybe the EFF gets lucky. Also, we already know what ATT and the NSA were doing, so it isn't exactly a state secret anymore. Although I wouldn't put it by this administration to argue that even though the illegal program is now public knowledge it is still a state secret because they say so.
Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
...the EFF people start dropping dead after having shot themselves in the back of the head with a shotgun?
Drill baby drill - on Mars
I am not a lawyer, but some evidence is already a little glaring in this case:
People complain about government surveillance sponsored by telecoms
Telecoms say "Government made us do it!"
Everyone looks at government and says "You can't do that."
Government passes a law that says "Now we can, and we're adding in a provision to say you can't complain about when we did before we passed the law!"
I've said it before and I'll say it a thousand times if I must: The constitution was written by, for, and in behalf of terrorists, traitors, and criminals of their time. Possible terrorism is not an excuse to violate the constitution, as that is what it was written to protect. The illegal surveillance and retroactive immunity both violate the constitution.
This is like calling the police about a shooting, and when they get there, they find the dead body burned to ashes. When they ask "Why did you burn the body?" you say "Because if I burn the body, you can't arrest me for shooting him! You have no evidence!"
I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
Recall that the telco immunities in the latest FISA passage only affect the telcos, not the government. If they're bold enough, the telcos may be able to help push this forward (since they're no longer able to be held liable, all this does it make their customers more comfortable by earning back their trust). Telcos likely have tons of documents they could publish (without invading customer privacy), teasing the courts with what must be loads more that could be secured with the appropriate warrants.
As to suing the government, I believe you actually have to petition for the right to sue ... which may be problematic when there's such obvious intent to keep this under wraps. I'm sticking with my pessimistic intuition that this won't come to light until all the relevant parties have retired or been removed from office (I hope I'm wrong ... heck, there's just barely enough time for an impeachment process, too!). Since this hurdle appears to have already been passed, there must be something resembling support -- hark, did the Dems grow a backbone?
Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
We have an ever increasing need for a reputable organisation such as the EFF fighting our corner. Governments and corporations have woken up to the digital revolution, and they all want their piece of the pie - often at our expense. They are one of the few organisations I donate monthly to, and I'm not even a US citizen / resident. They really do try and make a difference online and as evidenced by this story, there are no opponents too rich or powerful for them to take a stand against.
... Also, they gave me a "free" t-shirt. \o/
She's built like a steak house, but she handles like a bistro....
Yeah, but the EFF will care, no matter who winds up being President in 09. They will continue to press the matter regardless.
And GW is going to tell them to stuff it. I know that. I just want to know what perverse reasoning he's going to use to do it. What will he tell the EFF to make them stop? Executive privilege? War on terror? Because I'm emperor in all but title and you can't stop me?
I know it will be Orwellian and bizarre. I'm certain of that. But *what* will it be?
Can't wait. I'm sure it will raise my loathing to new heights.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
Yes, he could. The only exception to the American president's pardon power is "in matters
of impeachment". Anyone in the Executive or Judicial branch may be impeached (accused)
and removed from office (convicted). I'm not sure about impeaching Congressmen and Senators,
but those two bodies do get to write their own rules about how they run themselves.
So, whether the voiding of the pardon power applies narrowly to just this specific impeachment
plus removal process, or whether it means that any crime relating in some way to someone's
impeachment, would be decided by the Supreme Court. I suspect the narrower interpretation
was the "original intent", that is, that the presidential pardon power cannot override
the Congress's impeach and remove from office power.
My inner cynic tells me to expect Bush to issue a blanket pardon for everyone that ever did anything
in or with this administration, for any crime they committed or may have committed. (I should have
listened to it and bought oil and weapons stocks when Bush got in.)
I'm not sure if a presidential pardon prevents prosecution by the States.
If it does, then the only option left would be an International Tribunal. I don't think
wiretapping would be an international issue, but violations of the Geneva Convention (torture,
no due process when determining whether or not someone is an "Enemy Combatant") could.
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