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Bill bans illegal govt eavesdropping

GooeyGUI

Senior member
Bill Bans NSA Eavesdropping

Submitted by New York IFP on Fri, 2007-05-11 16:02.Americas | United States | News

The US house of representatives today passed a bill outlawing illegal domestic wiretapping by the government.

An amendment to the House Intelligence Reauthorization Bill by Representatives Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Jeff Flake (R-AZ) states that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (FISA) shall be the exclusive means by which domestic electronic surveillance for the purpose of gathering foreign intelligence information may be conducted, and makes clear that this applies until specific statutory authorization for electronic surveillance, other than as an amendment to FISA, is enacted.

"Congress has signaled that it will not allow the president to continue the National Security Agency?s illegal eavesdropping," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU?s Washington Legislative Office. "Passage of the Schiff/Flake amendment is Congress drawing a line in the sand. This amendment reaffirms that FISA is the law and it needs to be followed."

Congress originally passed FISA to provide the exclusive authority for the wiretapping of people in the United States in foreign intelligence investigations to protect national security.

As the Senate Report noted, FISA "was designed . . . to curb the practice by which the Executive Branch may conduct warrantless electronic surveillance on its own unilateral determination that national security justifies it."

The Bill ends plans by the Bush Administration that would give the NSA the freedom to pry into the lives of ordinary Americans.

The ACLU noted that, despite many recent hearings about "modernization" and "technology neutrality," the administration has not publicly provided Congress with a single example of how current FISA standards have either prevented the intelligence community from using new technologies, or proven unworkable for the agents tasked with following them.

"We applaud Congressmen Schiff and Flake for their work to uphold the rule of law," said Michelle Richardson, ACLU Legislative Consultant. "Today is the first move towards Congress growing a backbone. We hope that the Senate will follow their lead and not be swayed by the administration and Department of Justice?s unconstitutional attempts to eviscerate FISA."
 
Next headline: Bush vetoes eavesdropping bill.
Or, Bush signs eavesdropping bill; signing statement says "Not applicable to executive branch."
 
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Next headline: Bush vetoes eavesdropping bill.
Or, Bush signs eavesdropping bill; signing statement says "Not applicable to executive branch."

heh, i was juts gonna post that
 
I'm glad this is passing, but does anyone else have a problem with the phrase "outlawing illegal domestic wiretapping"? If it was already illegal, why did they need to pass a law to outlaw it? Couldn't they have just enforced the existing law that made it illegal. And if this law is what made it illegal, than the phrase is just redundant.
 
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