US Courts Approve 30,000 Secret Surveillance Orders Each Year
An anonymous reader writes "U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephen Smith estimates in a new paper (PDF) that 30,000 secret surveillance orders are approved each year in U.S. courts. 'Though such orders have judicial oversight, few emerge from any sort of adversarial proceeding and many are never unsealed at all.' Smith writes, 'To put this figure in context, magistrate judges in one year generated a volume of secret electronic surveillance cases more than thirty times the annual number of FISA cases; in fact, this volume of ECPA cases is greater than the combined yearly total of all antitrust, employment discrimination, environmental, copyright, patent, trademark, and securities cases filed in federal court.' He also adds a warning: 'Lack of transparency in judicial proceedings has long been recognized as a threat to the rule of law and roundly condemned in ringing phrases by many Supreme Court opinions.'"
While this is horrifying, it's at least a little comfort that there is any rule of law or due process left at all. That itself will probably be gone given a decade or so.
Greater transparency would enable meaningful oversight not only by appellate courts but also by Congress and the general public.
"Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
Oh, wait....
Sure 30,000 is a big number. But on balance, this means that .01% of the U.S. population is being surveiled.
That seems like a low number to me.
I think I see what the problem is.
http://transparency.gov/
The connection has timed out
The server at transparency.gov is taking too long to respond.
With that sort of response, you have got to go looking elsewhere in order to get anything done.
Since the summary didn't say, ECPA is The Electronic Communications Privacy Act, an updated version of the 1968 Federal Wiretap Act.
FISA is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and the FISA court (technically the FISC, Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court) generally rubber stamps wiretapping warrants, even after the fact.
So that's 30,000 that went through the courts, nice PR spin. How many surveillance ops were mounted WITHOUT court orders?
Take Nobody's Word For It.
I hope everyone realizes that while 30,000 seems like a large number... that means less than .01% of the US Population is under surveillance.
I'm fine with that.
a well thought out and moderated approach is the only viable answer.
That can't happen unless there's transparency. And considering the history of our own Government, FUD is the prudent course of action.
Above you said:
You know what is equally destructive to liberties, freedoms and fighting to regain civil rights? Fear, uncertainty, doubt. Conspiracy theorists.
First, FUD and conspiracy theories are two different things.
Secondly, you are wrong. Fear, uncertainty and doubt motivates people to dig deeper. To challenge those in power and to ask questions.
I get from you're stance that you'll just sit back and trust our elected officials to take care of you and look out for your best interests.
... a bunch of hyper sensitive politically motivated individuals running around adding to it
Nor does it help that there are folks trying too distract from the issue.
You are to complacent to be free; which has become the norm in American society unfortunately.
I fear for our grandchilren.
The "secret warrants" I really want to know about are the ones the judges turn down.
First, are there any? Second, on what grounds do any get turned down? Is it, "No, you knucklehead, that 82 year-old nun who goes to anti-war meetings is not a threat to national security" or is it, "Hey, this bit here about "capture or kill" that 82 year-old nun, is that really necessary?".
You are welcome on my lawn.
I read stories like these all almost every day, going on for years now. Then I read the comments and see angry American citizens decrying Americas descent into a police state. But I don't see any actual real protest, only angry comments online. Where is the angry protest marching on Washington? I'm Swedish and when our government tried to introduce new legislation that would give the intelligent agency increased power, there were huge protests for weeks all over the country. This legislation was also pretty tame compared to what you already have in America. Why are you so timid?
or these approvals are nothing more than rubber stamps.
either situation is nothing to be proud of.
Can we throw this guy out too? Perhaps after enough "you get four years to earn our trust" Presidents they might take the American public seriously again.
Of course Congress needs a good flushing as well, the Tea Party puts the fear in Republicans, the Democrats seriously need their equivalent - a group powerful enough and outside of most of their control who can threaten even old timers.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
But how do we know they didn't donate enough? Without a right to face your didn't-bribe accuser with bribe receipts in the courtroom, there's serious risk that the value of bribes may be nullified. Without a free press publishing statistics to correlate donations with respect for the donator's privacy, how can the public make informed choices about if, or how much, they should donate?
Is that the society we want to live in? One where you slip government officials a little something on the side with the understanding that you will be treated as a preferred citizen, and then the government welches on the deal? That's not the social contract I was brought up to expect.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
ECPA stands for Electronic Communications Privacy Act.
FISA stands for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
I favor total transparency of information whether in private or public hands. But I'll never get my wish.
One thing that people fail to consider is that people with organised agendas can do great harm. Suppose for example that your pet protest is urban spoil. There are a lot of people who fight urban sprawl. But suppose that your gripe with urban sprawl is assigned to you along with endless other complaints in an organised way with the only intention is to break down the nation's morale? Organised agents can wreak havoc with the public simply by endless complaining, use of exaggerated or false information and a certain ability to push peoples' buttons. If a person is noticed that complains a lot about various issues is it not wise to take a close look at him and make certain that he is only a negative personality rather than an enemy agent? I wonder how many people in the US are actually dedicated to destroying the nation as we know it. Keep in mind that it only takes a small percentage to inflame and cause revolt.
I'm so lonely.
Obligatory simulation of the approval process for surveillance orders:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P46qYCIt954
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine