By Matt Bewig and David Wallechinsky
United States - Despite
being propelled to victory by progressive supporters critical of the
Bush administration’s record on civil liberties, President Barack Obama
has directed the Justice Department
to defend many of the policies of George W. Bush, including warrant-less
wiretapping. Last week, the Justice Department filed papers asking the
Supreme Court to overturn an appeals court ruling that allowed the
continuation of an ACLU
lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a 2008 law giving the
government unprecedented authority to monitor Americans’ international
emails and phone calls.
That monitoring has its origins in the wake of the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks, when, a few years later, President Bush
instructed the National Security Agency
(NSA) to intercept Americans’ telephone calls without warrants, which
were required by the Constitution and the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA). FISA, a post-Watergate statute meant to rein in
domestic surveillance, created a special court, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), to approve or reject requests for domestic surveillance.
Between 1978 and 1992, presidents Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan and
George H.W. Bush presented 7,030 applications for warrants and the court
approved all of them as submitted. During his eight years in office,
President Bill Clinton and his Justice Department presented 6,057
warrant applications. The FISC approved 6,055 of them, modified one and
rejected one.
However, the harmonious relationship between the executive branch
and the FISC changed after George W. Bush became president. The court
rejected six requests outright and modified 179. It is worth noting that
all eleven members of the Bush-era FISC were selected by conservative
Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Annoyed by the FISC
judges’ refusal to rubber-stamp his policies, Bush bypassed the law and
ordered the NSA to secretly conduct illegal wiretapping.
When Bush’s secret program was revealed by The New York Times
in 2005, the Bush administration first agreed to seek FISC approval,
and when that failed, got Congress to permit the previously prohibited
warrantless wiretapping by passing the FISA Amendments Act of 2008.
President Bush signed the bill into law on July 10, 2008, and the ACLU
filed its challenge less than an hour later. The provisions of the act
are scheduled to end at the end of 2012.
The appeals court ruling, which was issued in March 2011, rejected
the Obama administration’s argument that the case should be dismissed
because the ACLU’s clients could not prove their communications would be
collected under the law, which was true largely because the law creates
great secrecy around the wiretaps in the first place–a true “Catch-22.”
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