Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy Government Security The Courts

National Security Letter Issuance Likely Headed To Supreme Court 112

Gunkerty Jeb writes The Ninth Circuit appeals court in San Francisco took oral arguments from the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Department of Justice yesterday over the constitutionality of National Security Letters and the gag orders associated with them. The EFF defended a lower court's ruling that NSLs are unconstitutional, while the DoJ defended a separate ruling that NSLs can be enforced. Whatever the court rules, the issue of NSLs is all but certainly headed for the Supreme Court in the not too distant future.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

National Security Letter Issuance Likely Headed To Supreme Court

Comments Filter:
  • DOJ Oaths (Score:5, Insightful)

    by trikes57 ( 2442722 ) on Thursday October 09, 2014 @07:08PM (#48107465)

    Didn't these guys have to take an oath to defend the Constitution?

    Its time to add teeth to Oath Violations. Loss of job, loss of pension, jail time.
    To argue that some silly law or court ruling overrides the First Amendment should be a criminal offense.

    • Fairly sure the Oath was to defend the Corporations.

    • Re:DOJ Oaths (Score:4, Interesting)

      by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Thursday October 09, 2014 @07:56PM (#48107753) Journal
      It really depends on the quality of parallel construction needed and what has to be presented in an open US court.
      "Feds reviewing DEA policy of counterfeiting Facebook profiles" (Oct 9 2014)
      http://arstechnica.com/tech-po... [arstechnica.com]
      "Twitter says gag on surveillance scope is illegal “prior restraint”" (Oct 8 2014)
      http://arstechnica.com/tech-po... [arstechnica.com]
      US says it can hack into foreign-based servers without warrants (Oct 8 2014)
      http://arstechnica.com/tech-po... [arstechnica.com]
      It seems the NSL aspect is just one aspect a very complex, hidden way of getting and using data for later use in the US legal system.
      In the past other surveillance programs like FAIRVIEW, OAKSTAR, RAMPART-A and WINDSTOP could bring in the data locally, globally via friendly nations and tame trusted big brands.
      The NSL seems to just fit in between a global sorting and direct use in the US legal system.
      It really depends how this plays out. Will the classic GCHQ view of not going to court so people feel like nothing telco related is going on?
      Or the new US idea that surveillance is now of such a global reach and low cost that US courts can know and and will have to just understand "collect it all"?
      The keys to a server and all users over time are now in play even if its just for legally finding one user for one case.
      Once your servers are part of a case, who can legally say that case has stopped? Weeks, months, years of no crypto and all logs. All very legal now? Soon?
    • How about adding loss of PERSON to that list. As in execution - the time-honored punishment for those who have committed treason. I certainly can't think of many acts more treasonous than the very people entrusted with the power and authority to enforce the law at the highest levels actively undermining the constitution they have sworn to defend.

      • Treason is providing aid and comfort to an enemy, generally held to be some sort of military enemy. It requires either a confession or more than one witness to the same overt act for conviction.

        Look, if we're defending the Constitution, let's defend the whole thing. I'm not all that fond of the Second Amendment, but you're not going to find me advocating what I see as unconstitutional gun control laws.

        • I would classify anyone undermining the very constitution that grants them any sort of legitimacy to be an enemy, wouldn't you?

    • Didn't these guys have to take an oath to defend the Constitution?

      Its time to add teeth to Oath Violations. Loss of job, loss of pension, jail time.
      To argue that some silly law or court ruling overrides the First Amendment should be a criminal offense.

      Nobody is arguing that some "silly law or court ruling overrides the First Amendment." The court rulings define what does and doesn't fall afoul of the First Amendment. The First Amendment's speech protections aren't universal (i.e. libel, incitement to violence), and they aren't specific to all cases, so the Constitution has to be interpreted, and the courts, for better or for worse, have to handle that.

    • >Didn't these guys have to take an oath to defend the Constitution?

      I'm always amazed how Americans treat the Constitution like some kind of sacred text and then argue constantly about angels and pinheads.

      If you're looking to distinguish between right and wrong, a religiously fundamental obsession with scripture is going to get you nowhere - it's better suited to defending the indefensible.

      Even if some bewigged and berobed supreme priest deems it constitutional, it's still wrong - and that's what matters.

  • All Judges (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 09, 2014 @07:09PM (#48107483)

    Crazy as it seems, all the judges were sent letters prohibiting them from taking this case due to National Security.

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Crazy as it seems, all the judges were sent letters prohibiting them from taking this case due to National Security.

      No, they're allowed to take the case --- but they MUST paste the text that has been provided to them into their ruling and adopt the text as their ruling on the matter.

    • by Toad-san ( 64810 )

      I find that very hard to believe. Could you please provide a link supporting that allegation?

  • From the Wikipedia article on National_security_letter [wikipedia.org]: A national security letter (NSL) is an administrative subpoena issued by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in authorized national security investigations "to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities" (i.e., spying).
  • DONATE (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kludge ( 13653 ) on Thursday October 09, 2014 @07:22PM (#48107553)
  • by koan ( 80826 )

    The same Supreme Court that brought us Citizens United? We are proper fucked now.

    • The objection to Citizens United is that it too TOO broad a view of the First Amendment, by granting First Amendment protections to speech that opponents of the decision didn't think should get those protections.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Maybe I am too much of an idealist (and give my country too much benefit of the doubt), but if SCOTUS (Supreme Court of the United States) does its job, this madness (NSL's) will be stifled.

    After, the American system is built on the assumption that one or two branches will attempt to subvert liberty, and that the other will reign them in.

    In this case the executive and legislative have run amock and believe themselves capable of handling essentially limitless power. NSLs are an excellent example, we want in

  • As always, no matter how non-obvious or convoluted the law, a regular person would face jail time if what they did were found to be illegal. And for government officials, they will merely be told "from now on, you may no longer do that".

  • by Princeofcups ( 150855 ) <john@princeofcups.com> on Thursday October 09, 2014 @07:54PM (#48107737) Homepage

    The the supreme court will decline ruling on it, and nothing will change.

    • The the supreme court will decline ruling on it, and nothing will change.

      No, they'll rule.

      The supreme court almost always makes the correct ruling... weather you and I agree with it or not. Citzens united, for example, was the correct ruling... even as unpopular as it was. Freedom does have its price after all. But SCOTUS are very slow to rule. They wait to take cases during the "right time" or when public opinion moves in the right direction. They are aware that if they rule on something that's currently very unpopular, they could cause a public backlash that would lead to even

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        Citizens United was not the correct ruling. Bribes are not a protected form of speech, and large campaign contributions made by an individual or a small group of individuals (remember that in a corporation, a small number of board members have near total autonomy in such decisions) are indistinguishable from bribes. And even if bribes were a constitutionally protected form of speech, it would still be entirely reasonable for government to limit the manner of that speech—requiring corporations to sp

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            Campaign contributions aren't bribes.

            The real problem is that what the CU decision effectively made legal were attack ads that mention a candidate by name, paid for by third parties. Although they are effectively in-kind contributions to the campaign, they aren't subject to any of the contribution limits that would normally apply to contributions, because they aren't actually given to the campaign.

            In effect, the CU decision allows for unbounded campaign contributions in the form of advertising dollars from

        • The Citizens United decision has nothing to do with bribes. In 2004, Citizens United (the group) wanted to block Micheal Moore's anti-Bush movie from being advertised during an election. The FEC rejected that, ruling that documentaries were protected by the first ammendment. So in 2008, Citizens United made an anti-Hillary movie and started to advertise it during an election. They were quickly struck down by FEC, who were then struck done by the Supreme Court. If you're such a "staunch defender of the near-
          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            If your facts were correct, I'd agree with you, but they aren't:

            • This case had nothing to do with the movies themselves. Those are clearly protected speech, and were never in question. This case was about advertisements for the movies aired on TV.
            • The FEC did not reject CU's challenge to Fahrenheit 9/11 on first amendment grounds. They rejected it because Fahrenheit 9/11's ads did not mention a candidate by name within 60 days of an election, and thus did not violate the law in question.
            • By contrast, they
            • I was trying to provide a broad overview and I don't disagree with your minor corrections. But there's still nothing about BRIBES.
  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday October 09, 2014 @08:06PM (#48107797) Homepage Journal

    In 2008 a pair of "New Black Panters" members were arrested for intimidating voters in Philadelphia. In due time they were sued by Bushitler's Department of Justice, which was about to win the case [wikipedia.org]. Obama's Department of Justice, however, allowed the men to avoid any punishment.

    I'm bringing this up to preempt any attempt to defend Obama DoJ current actions defending "Security Letters" by their "having to" defend a law. They don't have to. When they didn't feel like it, they dropped the ball and let several thugs walk free and unscathed. Today they do feel like it, they want to have this law and are earnestly defending it.

    They may even win, but even if they lose, it will not be for lack of trying. Oh, and they want to keep a backdoor [slashdot.org] for themselves in your personal electronics too. Remember that if ever you have a difficulty deciding on who to vote for — a promise, that Democrats will improve your civil liberties, will be a lie.

    • But for the Justice Department to win the Supreme Court will have to rule that companies don't have a right to do whatever they want. Considering their legislative history, I think we are pretty safe.
      • Well, the practice will be illegal anyway. But it always has been, and we see that no one really pays attention to that pesky "legality" question, so what'll probably happen is that it will get a new window dressing, be secret, and no one will be the wiser.

        Oh, it'll still be illegal, but that's what gag orders are for.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Any promise by Republicrats is a lie. Didn't generations of Bushes and Clinton and Obama Hussein Barracks teach you anything???

    • "The System" is broken and yet The People are left to rely on either "The System" to straighten out the government, or The People to straighten out the government. Not sure how many Americans are even able to follow car-line rules at their local elementary school, much less straighten out the government. The government is capable of all acting as one, and The People aren't.

      No, the government wants it's power because The People don't want theirs. When an exiting president gives a speech [youtube.com] indicating trou
  • the Supreme Court is most likely fatally compromised as the NSA will already have all the dirt they need on the Judges in order to get them to make the "decision" they need....
  • The judgement will be made FOR the constitutionality of NSLs on a 5-4 split decision...assuming of course that they hear the argument at all.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

Working...