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NSA Wiretapping Whistleblower 725

Kagu writes "ABC News is running a short piece about an interview with former NSA Employee Russell Tice and his allegations that the NSA wiretaps are more pervasive than believed and used in ways he believes violated the law. "
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NSA Wiretapping Whistleblower

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  • by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:04AM (#14453196)

    A lot more info on this subject, including a transcript of the interview of Russell Tice by Amy Goodman, can be found here [democracynow.org].

    From the interview:
    RUSSELL TICE: Well, as far as an intelligence officer, especially a SIGINT officer at N.S.A., we're taught from very early on in our careers that you just do not do this. This is probably the number one commandment of the SIGINT Ten Commandments as a SIGINT officer. You will not spy on Americans. It is drilled into our head over and over and over again in security briefings, at least twice a year, where you ultimately have to sign a paper that says you have gotten the briefing. Everyone at N.S.A. who's a SIGINT officer knows that you do not do this. Ultimately, so do the leaders of N.S.A., and apparently the leaders of N.S.A. have decided that they were just going to go against the tenets of something that's a gospel to a SIGINT officer.
    • This is probably the number one commandment of the SIGINT Ten Commandments as a SIGINT officer. You will not spy on Americans.

      Intelligence agencies instilling moral values in their agents. What will they think of next?
      • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:39AM (#14453391) Homepage Journal
        There actually were some sound legal principles underlying the creation of the NSA. They had some idea of just how badly those powers could be abused.

        Anyway, this is a very old problem in a new disguise. It used to be the case that most of your personal information was locked up inside your head, and the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination was very powerful. The secondary protections against warrentless search were also good, though less critical. Because of modern recording technologies, a vast amount of our personal information is becoming externalized, and the amount is increasing all of the time. If we are to have any meaningful privacy, we need to do something.

        I think the thing we need to do is actually pretty obvious, though I don't know if we'll get there. I think we need to clarify that your personal information belongs to YOU, and that should include your right to store your personal records on your own equipment. Given that situation, your privacy would be protected by the privacy rules you put on your own storage devices--and you could change your mind at any time, revealing more or less information for any reason. Possession in nine points of the law.

        • by NialScorva ( 213763 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:14AM (#14453690)
          I would argue that the second that you interact with another person, organization, or any other entity with legal rights, that the information is no longer solely yours to control. If you buy something from me, then who owns the information about that transfer?

          When you load slashdot, you handing bytes to your ISP requesting that they hand it to several of their peers, then have those peers hand it back to you. Who "owns" those exchanges?

          • Easy answer. (Score:4, Insightful)

            by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:21AM (#14453762)
            If you buy something from me, then who owns the information about that transfer?
            You own the information that you sold item X.

            You do NOT own the information on who bought item X.

            You, being the vendor, have more limited privacy rights than I as the private customer do.

            When you load slashdot, you handing bytes to your ISP requesting that they hand it to several of their peers, then have those peers hand it back to you. Who "owns" those exchanges?
            Again, look at the vendors and the private customers. /. is a public site, so they don't own the info on my connection.

            Comcast is a public vendor so they don't own the info on my connection.

            Comcast does own the info that they were requested to connect to /.
            & /. does own the info that Comcast requested a connection.
            but
            neither of them own my name.
            • Re:Easy answer. (Score:4, Insightful)

              by theStorminMormon ( 883615 ) <theStorminMormon.gmail@com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:29AM (#14453833) Homepage Journal
              That's a nice, pat theory. I'd like to hear a lawyer inform us as to how much of it has any reflection whatsoever in case law.

              Personally, however, I think information laws are bit more complex in reality. For example if you buy some fertilizer at Store A and they have your credit card # (your personal ID) and then you go blow something up with a bomb made from that fertilizer and the FBI comes calling - do they have the right or responsibility to transmit the data they have on you?

              So let's not be hopelessly idealistic. If you buy something from a store w/ a check or a credit card - they DO have your info. It's silly to say they "don't own it". They have it - the question is what can they do with it? And the answer, from the above, is obviously not "nothing ever under any circumstances".

              -stormin
              • None of it is, yet. (Score:4, Informative)

                by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @11:38AM (#14454498)
                I'd like to hear a lawyer inform us as to how much of it has any reflection whatsoever in case law.
                None of it is, yet. At least, not in the USofA.

                In other countries, they're taking personal information much more seriously.
                For example if you buy some fertilizer at Store A and they have your credit card # (your personal ID) and then you go blow something up with a bomb made from that fertilizer and the FBI comes calling - do they have the right or responsibility to transmit the data they have on you?
                Law enforcement is entirely different. The FBI can get a warrant and get any and all information about such sales.

                "Ownership" does not mean that the store cannot provide the info when served with a warrant.

                "Ownership" means that the store cannot SELL that info or provide it to any 3rd party (non-law enforcement).
                So let's not be hopelessly idealistic.
                Why not? Our country was founded on such idealism.
                If you buy something from a store w/ a check or a credit card - they DO have your info.
                They have it, but it is not their's.
                It's silly to say they "don't own it".
                No it is not. Just as it is not "silly" to expect that your HR department won't go posting your social security number on the web along with your name and home address.
                They have it - the question is what can they do with it?
                Right now, they can do anything they want with it, in the USofA. Other countries are more strict. And there is no reason why we cannot become stricter.

                • If you're going to use terms in narrow or specialized ways, you shoule really give the definition up front and not wait for someone to use the broadly accepted definition and then act as though they're wrong. It's both disingenous and unhelpful.

                  In this case in the broad sense it's reasonable to say that I own my own body - even though in fact I can not sell myself legally in this country (or even certain parts thereof - like organs).

                  So I maintain that in a broad sense a store does "own" the data about a gi
      • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:01AM (#14453586)
        Intelligence agencies instilling moral values in their agents. What will they think of next?

        Kidding aside, the overriding principle of intelligence in the U.S. used to be "Speak truth to power," once upon a time. The bending of those agencies' souls in the run-up to Iraq is terrifying to anyone who remembers the elder Bush's term at the CIA. George H.W. Bush didn't preside over an agency whose sole purpose was to buttress decisions already made by "instinct."

        "Intelligence" groups do have their principles. They aren't what you'd call morality, exactly, but when they're distorted it ain't any good at all.

    • The classic way around that restriction was to have an allied intelligence service do the spying on Americans for them, while returning the favour by passing them information on their nationals that they weren't allowed to collect. Once the spying (data collection) part was done, I'm not sure that the processing, tagging, linking and reporting was kept especially seperate.
    • SIGINT? (Score:5, Funny)

      by maxwell demon ( 590494 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:53AM (#14453504) Journal
      SIGINT officer? Do they also have SIGHUP officer?
      Well, as long as they don't send you a SIGKILL officer ... :-)
    • It has been an awfully long time, but I was a "radio communications analyst" back in the late 70's and early 80's. Though I wore an Air Force uniform and collected my paycheck from them, everybody in my units were tasked by, and reported directly to, NSA. My first 3+ years were spent doing real-time work in the far east and the last 6 months at Fort Meade at NSA HQ. I can assure you that all of us were aware of the fact that intercepting communications involving any "United States Persons" were strictly for
  • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:04AM (#14453198) Journal
    According to Tice, intelligence analysts use the information to develop graphs that resemble spiderwebs linking one suspect's phone number to hundreds or even thousands more.
    This is becoming more and more common for the intelligence community to use. You can call it data mining or information retrieval, it has a lot of names (some sound nicer than others).

    In fact, there are commercially available engines out there that anyone can buy. Check out Collexis [collexis.com], which also has demos [collexis.net] online. This isn't as advanced as what the analysts at the NSA are using but it's close. Plug something like this into ontology software such as Cerebra [cerebra.com] and you've got a decent tool for keeping dossiers on people.

    Nothing about this is illegal until the information passed into it is acquired illegally. Like most people, I'm a little more than annoyed that our civil liberties are slowly ebbing. One thing I've learned from history is that freedom and liberties are often the hardest things to find once you've lost them.

    Recently, I've relied on the ACLU and certain political groups to jump all over the president and anyone who is part of the government if they overstep these bounds. I sure hope Tice gets his wish to reform the intelligence community as to how they handle wiretapping Americans. They can wiretap everyone else in the world but I don't want our government wiretapping us without the usual requisite warrants.

    Side note on Tice, I kind of admire him for doing this. He's not going to go to jail because he's (intelligently) not revealed anything classified. He's only saying that this is going on. Now, I hope he's prepared to not work there anymore because I imagine the rest of his career is going to be fairly cold with people treating him like a snitch.
    • by ObsessiveMathsFreak ( 773371 ) <obsessivemathsfreak.eircom@net> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:14AM (#14453235) Homepage Journal
      Nothing about this is illegal until the information passed into it is acquired illegally.

      What counts as "legal"?

      We live in a world where Gitmo is not only tolerated, but even approved by huges numbers of people in government, academia and in the public at large. Wiretap someones phone illegally, and if the president gave you say so, I doubt many judges would throw it out at this point. Get information by half drowing someone or photographing their anus and not only will judges not object, they'll pass judgement based on it!
      • matter of choice.

        What choices we do make is what will define us as a people.

        Some people are making bad choices and hurting and killing other people by the tens of thousands, some people are hurting far many more but killing far fewer.

        I resent the fact that the president just couldn't be bothered to go and get the legal authorization 'post-facto'; perhaps because there was no authorization or justification to be granted; in which case he is a more paranoid bastard than Nixon ever was and doesn't deserve to f
        • I resent the fact that the president just couldn't be bothered to go and get the legal authorization 'post-facto'; perhaps because there was no authorization or justification to be granted

          The reason is that the even the FISA court would have rejected a request covering random or total monitoring of "any and all traffic"; they only approve monitoring traffic of a specified person. That's the real crime here - they may well have monitored ALL calls for keywords, etc. Just discussing what happened with y

    • Tice had his security clearance removed and was fired because of psychological concerns.
       
        He is not infact a whistle blower but rather a disgruntled employee seeking some type of revenge.
       
        I would investigate his motives before buying every bit of his story hook, line and sinker.
      • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:20AM (#14453273) Journal
        Tice had his security clearance removed and was fired because of psychological concerns.
        And you've just swallowed this information--hook, line and sinker.

        ABC News seemed to treat him as pretty psychologically stable. How do you know the government isn't painting him to be this way so that his story isn't believable?

        After the president admitted to wiretapping some Americans without the proper warrants, you bet I'll believe Tice's story.
      • FTFA:

        The NSA revoked Tice's security clearance in May of last year based on what it called psychological concerns and later dismissed him.

        I would agree. We are talking about someone who got fired, and THEN decided to "whistle blow" If he reported this first and THEN got fired, then I would be more inclined to believe him. But the fact that he was fired first and afterward decided that he "needed" to report this to a newspaper (as opposed to filing a wrongful dismissal dispute via the legal system)
        • by Anonymous Coward
          That is possible. It is also possible that he tried to work out the problem within the system, approaching his superiors repeatedly about the legal and moral problems in what was going on, and this behaviour is what got him labeled as psychologically unstable. I'm not saying this is necessarily what happened, I'm just saying that it is hard to tell at this stage.
        • by ObsessiveMathsFreak ( 773371 ) <obsessivemathsfreak.eircom@net> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:43AM (#14453418) Homepage Journal
          I would agree. We are talking about someone who got fired, and THEN decided to "whistle blow" If he reported this first and THEN got fired, then I would be more inclined to believe him. But the fact that he was fired first and afterward decided that he "needed" to report this to a newspaper (as opposed to filing a wrongful dismissal dispute via the legal system) does not speak well to his motives

          Tice had been making noises before he got fired. He was one of those pushing for greater congressional protection for whistleblowers. Hint, hint.

          Shortly thereafter, his bosses had him pulled in for a medical exam, where despite having no symptoms, the MO labeled him as suffering from paranoia. This is standard practice in such circles to ensure compliance, and to provide ammo for any subsequent smear campaigns.

          It's like this. Anyone who believes that the NSA was not spying on their own country, is the real mentally unstable individual.
          • by Anna Merikin ( 529843 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:12AM (#14453674) Journal

            The Soviets were infamous for declaring dissidents insane and imprisoning them in "hospitals" for "treatment." Think this is not so? Then read Gulag Archepelago.

            Every police state tries this approach.

            Tice is not paranoid; he (and we) have real enemies, and, more and more often, those enemies are in our own government.

      • by aussie_a ( 778472 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:36AM (#14453368) Journal
        I would investigate his motives before buying every bit of his story hook, line and sinker.

        No. I would investigate whether or not it is true before buying his story hook, line and sinker. But if America just dismisses this guy because he may or may not have an ulterior motive, then that's sad. He might be insane and seething at his ex-employees. But he can still be right. This wouldn't an investigation against a citizen, but one against a government agency. Investigate, then if it's learned it isn't true, no harm done. Ignore it, and learn it was true, and a lot of harm is done.
    • So let's get this straight: If I happened to order pizza from the same place as my friendly neighborhood terror cell, that puts my number on their radar. (Forget it if the local pizza place is owned by Muslim immigrants.) Once I'm on their radar, those handfuls of overseas calls I make probably draw attention to me.

      One of these days, someone who has nothing to hide is going to subpoena the NSA for records of whether or not their phone has been observed, and request copies of warrants authorizing said obs
    • Telephone calls to and from the subject are represented in a spiderweb model. Telemarketing firm calls suspect and several 10.000ths of other people. Others are called by other marketing firms again. Model explodes?
      Or this one, just as interesting: The model takes marketing firms in account, a marketing firm employee is a terrorist (not suspected) and does the communication by calling terrorist one, communicate, than terrorist two, etc.. So what to do when you use the model? Include firm because of the seco
  • It doesn't bother me that they want to wiretap suspected terrorists, but why the no-warrant stuff? Can't they just get a classified warrant? I wouldn't care at all except that they appear to be going around the law that I had thought applied to everyone. I guess it applies to everyone except for enemies of the state, or anyone that is unfortunate enough to be flagged as one. For instance, that professor corresponding with his friend in the Phillipines that had his mail opened, read and re-sealed. Isnt' that a federal offense?
    • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:14AM (#14453240) Journal
      It doesn't bother me that they want to wiretap suspected terrorists, but why the no-warrant stuff? Can't they just get a classified warrant?
      Well, in the article, they mentioned using data mining to find when the word "jihad" was used in a conversation. In reality, they don't have many suspected terrorists so they would like to just use this technology on the largest set of civilians as possible. In order to do the paper work and justify this action ... well, they'd have to go through the warrant process for every American.

      So they bend the rules a little and overlook some of our rights and suddenly they have a great tool for catching terrorists or anyone that uses the wrong language!

      I hope you never become a "suspected terrorist" because nowadays, the word "suspected" seems to be equivalent with "guilty" in the eyes of Homeland Security.
      • Back in the day, when people first started hearing about E-mail browsing by the FBI/CIA/whomever, we just started posting a list of words at the bottom of every e-mail to overwhelm their computers so they would stop doing that to regular citizens. While I don't really condone that activity, I can see a scenario where people might adopt saying "jihad" for hello and goodbye, just so that the wiretaps start getting applied to everyone. Of course, if a top campaign contributor's son/daughter gets wiretapped,
      • Absolutely, and can we really say that we're surprised by this, with a name like "Homeland Security?" America is not a "Fatherland," "Motherland," or "Homeland." "Homeland" is so Orwellian it makes your blood run cold. So it was only a matter of time before this repressive agency became in deed what it already was in name.
    • by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:16AM (#14453250)

      Can't they just get a classified warrant?

      There's a good explanation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court here [npr.org], as well as more information on George W. illegally bypassing said court here [nwsource.com].
    • by aredubya74 ( 266988 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:20AM (#14453274)
      This is exactly the point. FISA gives the feds clearance to intercept communications (mail, landline phone, wireless phone, Internet) where one party is international, and the other is domestic. They can apply for a warrant retroactively up to 72 hours after beginning interception. These warrants are basically never turned down, but that's only because the users (NSA, DOJ, DOD) are used to the evidentiary requirements of the FISA court. Anything that is person-to-person in the US has to be done by the FBI and through the regular courts, which really aren't any more onerous.

      Since 9/11, the Bush administration has run into far more delays and outright refusal to grant warrants from the FISA court, though not because of "red tape" or political fallout (or because the FISA court hates America). It's because the evidence isn't there to justify them. This is why Bush directed the NSA to go around FISA and just wiretap whenever they felt they needed to, oversight (and evidence) be damned. This is black-letter violation of the law, and Bush (and the lawyers and staff that told him it was justifiable) needs to be held accountable.
  • by chriss ( 26574 ) * <chriss@memomo.net> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:06AM (#14453210) Homepage

    A recent study [forschungsgruppe.de] (German) showed that 10% of all Germans or 16% of all Germans older than 18 years already use VoIP. Germany is placed 3rd in broadband use in Europe in absolute numbers, although it is the country with the largest population. This is a new trend, numbers are rising fast. I guess that the numbers in the US will be even higher. So switching to encrypted VoIP might be a viable solution for the near future.

    Chriss

    --
    memomo.net [memomo.net] - brush up your German, French, Spanish or Italian - online and free

  • by slushbat ( 777142 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:17AM (#14453255)
    I think that the only way to get to the bottom of such serious allegations is to investigate the evidence. Perhaps if we could secretly intercept the communications between the administration and the NSA we might find out what is really going on.
  • by digitaldc ( 879047 ) * on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:18AM (#14453262)
    "If you picked the word 'jihad' out of a conversation," Tice said, "the technology exists that you focus in on that conversation, and you pull it out of the system for processing." According to Tice, intelligence analysts use the information to develop graphs that resemble spiderwebs linking one suspect's phone number to hundreds or even thousands more.

    It can be argued that people who don't want to have their conversations monitored will not use keywords such as these that tip off the eavesdroppers or technology that recognizes them.
    And conversely, people may use meaningless conversations with many keywords to delay the processing of these investigations.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:21AM (#14453278)
    American citizens were spied on without warrant all the time!
  • "If you picked the word 'jihad' out of a conversation," Tice said, "the technology exists that you focus in on that conversation, and you pull it out of the system for processing."

    I'm not defending the intelligence community's tactis, per se, Americans deserve to know why warrants weren't requested.

    OTOH, if all they were doing is looking for jihadists, then I'm not going to march on Washington just yet. I'm concerned about the word 'terrorist' being expanded to include people who smoke weed, bitch a
    • I looked up the American constitution (I don't know it off by heart, I know. I'm a terrible Australian). It has an ammendment that I think you might find informative.

      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.

      Now last I c

  • by TheDoctorWho ( 858166 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:27AM (#14453319)
    Nothing was stopping Bush from doing this in a legal manner. NOTHING.

    Bush, during campaign 2004 repeatedly told the American people he would never do such a thing, even with the mis-named Patriot Act in place.

    Bush Logic: Since the Terorrists hate our freedoms, perhaps we should take away the freedom of Americans. That will show that Bin Laden.

    Bush, worst president in US History.
    • Bush ... repeatedly told the American people he would never do such a thing...

            And you expect a politician (of ANY party) to not do exactly the opposite of what he says, huh?
    • by Polar27 ( 937218 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:59AM (#14454133)
      Here's an actual quote:

      "[T]here are such things as roving wiretaps. Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court order before we do so. It's important for our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional guarantees are in place when it comes to doing what is necessary to protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution."

      President George W. Bush, 2004, http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/04/20 040420-2.html [whitehouse.gov]
    • Bush, during campaign 2004 repeatedly told the American people he would never do such a thing, even with the mis-named Patriot Act in place.

      It might be more accurate and helpful if we always refer to it as the "PATRIOT Act" to call attention to the fact that the name is an acronym. It at least encourages people to remember that it's an arbitrary set of letters designed to politically shield the Act from discussion. Are you going to argue against the "Patriot" Act? Are you not a Patriot?

      "Providing Appr

  • by harris s newman ( 714436 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:37AM (#14453374)
    Mark my words, this will turn into a constitutional crisis, especially if Bush and Chaney are not impeached for their wrongdoing. What we have is not, as Chaney put it, a strengthing of the executive branch. This is a takeover of the democratic process itself. The president is acting as a dictator by being above the law. I have already written all my representatives on this matter, and I recommend that if you feel strongly that your rights were violated (either directly through spying, or indirectly by the violation of constitutional laws), you should also write your representatives. Oh, and the argument by Bush that he is protecting the homeland is hogwash, especially if you believe him when he took the oath of the presidency to "protect the constitution". If he truely is protecting the homeland, he must uphold his oath of the presidency and protect the constitution. By protecting the constitution, I mean also that he must abide by the constitution and it's laws.
    • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:25AM (#14453802)
      Mark my words, this will turn into a constitutional crisis, especially if Bush and Chaney are not impeached for their wrongdoing

      You're a little confused. The constitutional crisis would come because of some lame impeachment campaign along those lines. By the way... how do you feel about the Democrat members of the congressional and senate committees who are regularly tuned into this sort of thing? How did you feel about it when the previous administration backed up the very same type of authority and action? For example, here's Clinton's deputy Attorney General (Jamie Gorelick) testifying before the House Permanent Select Commitee on Intelligence in 1994:

      "The Department of Justice believes -- and the case law supports -- that the president has inherent authority to conduct warrantless physical searches for foreign intelligence purposes and that the president may, as he has done, delegate this authority to the attorney general..." She added that the same authority pertains to electronic surveilance such as wiretaps.

      How about Jimmy Carter? Should he have been impeached? In 1978 his Attorney General (Griffin B. Bell) testified before a federal judge about warrantless searches he and President Carter had authorized against two US men suspected of spying for the Vietnamese government.

      Were you listening, in 1994, when Clinton used his regular radio address to discuss a new policy of using warrantless searches in particularly violent US public housing developments? No?

      Using intel about Al Queda associates to track down who is calling them (or being called by them) when some of those calls terminate in the US is fundamental stuff. Not using every means to track that stuff would be a dereliction. Specific warrants covering every twist and turn of electronic communications being used by someone who calls a rotating, daily-changing array of disposable cell phones is essentially impossible. That's why the NSA's data mining is so appropriate in this case, and the CinC is absolutely correct to authorize its use. When an Al Queda safe house in Pakistan is raided, and a seized laptop includes lists of phone numbers in the Middle East, we need to be able to immediately, and persistenly follow up on any call from the US that reaches out to those same numbers, and follow the trail of other people who are calling those people, especially from overseas. But you can't list that stuff in a warrant because you don't (and can't) know it in advance.
      • by Zathrus ( 232140 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @12:02PM (#14454751) Homepage
        For example, here's Clinton's deputy Attorney General (Jamie Gorelick) testifying before the House Permanent Select Commitee on Intelligence in 1994:

        Which lead to Executive Order 12949 [fas.org] on Feb 9, 1995 because he was told that this was not legal, but it was allowable to fall under the jurisdiction of FISA.

        In 1978 his Attorney General (Griffin B. Bell) testified before a federal judge about warrantless searches he and President Carter had authorized against two US men suspected of spying for the Vietnamese government

        Which lead to the creation of FISA, because SCOTUS deemed it to be unconstitutional without both Congressional authority (the creation of FISA) and judicial review (the FISA court itself).

        Neither of which is analogous to the case before us now -- we have a redux of what Carter did in 1978, except that this time it's been ongoing for over 4 years and is in direct contradiction to the SCOTUS ruling that lead to the creation of FISA in the first place.

        e need to be able to immediately, and persistenly follow up on any call from the US that reaches out to those same numbers, and follow the trail of other people who are calling those people, especially from overseas. But you can't list that stuff in a warrant because you don't (and can't) know it in advance.

        And you don't need to. FISA allows for warrantless wiretaps for a limited duration -- as long as they're submitted to the FISA court for approval within 72 hours. Precisely what prevented Bush and the NSA from doing that? They've already increased FISA requests by over 70% since 9/11, and out of 5645 requests only 3 have been completely denied (an additional 3 denied, but then granted upon appeal or modification). I think you'd be hard pressed to find any other court that approves 99.95% of all warrants requested over four years (and that percentage is much higher if you go over the court's entire history -- prior to 2001 there was only 1 warrant denied w/o later approval by FISA).
  • The vidicon was the first small, lightweight cheap television camera, developed IIRC in the late 1950s or early 1960s. It was a vacuum tube, but it was "about the size of a hot dog," and it enabled the development of television camera that were about the size of a VHS camcorder and cost about $1000. It was a revolution and led to the use of closed-circuit TV cameras by serious amateurs, schools, corporations, and for surveillance. (It wasn't up to broadcast quality, and TV studios continued to use the gigan
    • Of course the problem was always that as long as it takes a human being to interpret the information, the ratio of number of spys to the number of people spied upon is too large to be economical for intruding on ordinary citizens.



      Why, do like the STASI* did: Have half of the population spy on the other half. Or even better, have everyone spy on everyone else.



      * (Ministry of State Security in the former German Democratic Repulic)

  • by Hoplite3 ( 671379 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @09:47AM (#14453461)
    What makes all of this so much more painful to me is that the old intelligence system was turning up the information required. Terrorists were nabbed at the borders, and so on. The New York bombings were on the radar. It wasn't a lack of information that was the problem, it was a lack of analysis. How does taping a hundred, a thousand, a million more telephone conversations help? All of this information has to be mined, but each extraction that is not related to the criminal case comes at the expense of someone's rights.

    We HAD a system that was balancing individual rights with the need for surveillance*, it was working in the sense that good information was being found without tapping one phone in 300.

    Now, the barn is on fire and everyone seems to want to spray water on the house.

    *Need for surveillance -- I'm not convinced that the level of big brother spying conducted before the attacks was warranted. Frankly, the FISA courts scare the hell out of me. I don't like secret warrants more than gag orders or secret laws. I was willing to accept them -- part of the great compromise of democracy -- but they look like they were the slippery slope to today.
  • Liberty vs. Death (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ChrisDolan ( 24101 ) <chris+slashdot.chrisdolan@net> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @10:23AM (#14453786) Homepage
    From a congressional news outfit [hillnews.com],

    "None of your civil liberties matter much after you're dead," said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), a former judge and close ally of the president who sits on the Judiciary Committee.

    Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), who has led a bipartisan filibuster against a reauthorization of the Patriot Act, quoted Patrick Henry, an icon of the American Revolution, in response: "Give me liberty or give me death."

    Man, I love that guy! :-)
  • by Dave21212 ( 256924 ) <dav@spamcop.net> on Thursday January 12, 2006 @11:00AM (#14454140) Homepage Journal

    This is breaking news in the Baltimore area this morning (and last night). For those of you are are defending Bush for ignoring the courts and ignoring the Constitution, based on the premise that the NSA is "only looking for terrorists" you may be surprised...

    From NSA SPIES ON BALTIMORE QUAKERS [freemarketnews.com]
    Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - FreeMarketNews.com

    The National Security Agency has been spying on a Baltimore anti-war group, according to documents released during litigation, going so far as to document the inflating of protesters' balloons, and intended to deploy units trained to detect weapons of mass destruction, RAW STORY has learned. According to the documents, the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore, a Quaker-linked peace group, has been monitored by the NSA working with the Baltimore Intelligence Unit of the Baltimore City Police Department.

    The actual court documents are online [rawstory.com]
    And here's an interview [americanchronicle.com] with one of the primaries.

    Granted, they didn't through them into Gitmo or anything (yet), but it's interesting because it's in zip code 21212, my own back yard ! (it's true what they say).
  • Declaration of war (Score:3, Informative)

    by Brushen ( 938011 ) on Thursday January 12, 2006 @03:37PM (#14457094)
    The legality of the wiretaps entirely depends on this section of FISA [cornell.edu]. Because of that section, it entirely depends on whether or not Congress has issued a declaration of war.

    Because of that sentence in that section, it entirely depends on whether the authorization to use military force in Iraq constituted a declaration of war, and for 2001 to 2003, it entirely depends on whether, in the document's words, the "authorization to use military force against the persons or nations or organizations who were involved in the September 11 attacks and the people or nations that harbored them."

    The 2001 authorization, should it be interpeted as a declaration of war, would last until every person involved in the 9-11 attacks are captured, and Bin Laden, and maybe one or two others, are still out there, so soon enough it would be like we have "declared war," from Bush's lawyers' point of view, on one person, which has happened before, when we declared war on the leader of a Mexican revolution one or two centuries ago.

    No, rather than just the 19 that hi-jacked the planes, because it says organizations, we are after the entirety of Al-Qaeda, and that "declaration of war" will last until every member of that organization is either caught, killed, or dead. It will last until every nation that has harbored Al-Quaeda members has surrendered. It will last until every organization that harbored Al-Quaeda is defunct, their membered killed, or their members dead. It is the sheer broadness of this that leads me to believe that this is a war we cannot win.

    Furthermore, according to the Rules of Construction outlined in Title 1, Chapter 1, Section 1, "person" includes societies, organizations, companies, firms, and partnerships. A society is a group of people who share similar beliefs. Would you not say terrorists, are, then, a society? If Bush wanted to stretch this for all it's worth in the world, when he says we are in the middle of the War on Terrorism, does he really, honestly, believe we are really in the middle of a War on Terrorism?

    The media, or at least the visual media, has not mentioned this provision of FISA, but once, to my knowledge, in the entire time since this scandal came to light, when MSNBC quoted Bush's lawyers and Alberto Gonzales explaining that Bush has had the authority to do this because they interpret the authorization as a declaration of war. This took two paragraphs. The other times it has been dumbed down, in saying the president says he can do it because of an article of the Constitution invested in him the power of commander-in-chief, which doesn't tell anything at all. They're trying to dumb it down for you, but hopefully, since this is news for nerds, this post will make it up to the top.

    I sent a letter to my congressman, Jim Cooper, on this on the 22nd of December and received no reply. I expect you all to send letters to your congressmen and women, too. Here is the letter I sent, explaining the same as above, but with more references to statues, bills, and resolutions:

    Dear Mr. Cooper,

    When the Authorization for Use of Military Force, S.J. Resolution 23, was passed in September 2001, I was greatly disturbed by the phrasing of Section 2, Subsection a, because of its usage of the word "persons." Title 1 Section 1 of the United States legal code defines "person" to include "societies," which, although I think legally undefined, is defined by the American Heritage Dictionary as, in that context, "A group of humans broadly distinguished from other groups by mutual interests, participation in characteristic relationships, shared institutions, and a common culture," or "An organization or association of persons engaged in a common profession, activity, or interest."

    Under this notion, President Bush could be said to be able to continue this military authorization until all necessary and appropriate force has been taken against the society o

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