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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: ACLU Edwin C. Yohnka, ACLU of Illinois Phone: 312.201.9740, ext. 305 Laura Saponara, ACLU of Northern California Phone: 415.621.2493, ext. 326 Gordon Smith, ACLU of Southern California Phone: 213.977.9500, ext. 247 Rebecca Rauber, ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties Phone: 619.232.2121 ext. 26 |
Congress Cannot Grant Wholesale Immunity to Telecoms; FISA 2008 Act is Unconstitutional, ACLU Tells Court
CHICAGO, Illinois - October 17 - Congress and the Bush White House overstepped their constitutional authority and violated the rights of millions of customers when they passed and approved legislation granting sweeping immunity to telecoms that collaborated in illegal spying. That assertion is contained in a court filing today by three California affiliates and the Illinois affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, along with other interested parties in cases consolidated in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The ACLU lawsuits filed on behalf of dozens of plaintiffs - including renowned Chicago journalist Studs Terkel, former California Congressman Tom Campbell, journalist Robert Scheer and actor Richard Belzer -- challenge the unlawful collaboration of major telecommunications' companies - including AT&T - with the Bush Administration's warrantless dragnet surveillance of electronic communications and records.
"Under our constitutional system, Congress and the Executive Branch do not determine whether actions taken by the Executive violate basic constitutional rights," said Harvey Grossman, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois and co-lead counsel for the cases combined in the San Francisco court. "Since Marbury v. Madison, we have recognized that only a court can determine the meaning of the Constitution - it is simply not a power granted to the Congress and the President."
This filing is in response to passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Amendments of 2008 which mandate that courts dismiss any cases against AT&T or other telecommunications' companies if the Attorney General chooses to file a secret certification attesting that the executive branch told the phone companies that the surveillance was lawful. Under the immunity provisions, the federal court does not determine whether the spying was in fact legal, but only that the representation of legality was made by the executive branch. The Attorney General has filed such a certification in these cases. This certification, according to the ACLU is not surprising, since the Attorney General argued for immunizing the telecoms in public statements and in testimony before the law was passed in public statements and in testimony before Congress.
"It strains credulity to believe that the same Attorney General who argued that immunity must be granted has fairly and completely weighed the interests of our clients in making his decision to ask the court to dismiss their case without determining whether any constitutional rights were violated," said Ann Brick, staff attorney for the ACLU of Northern California.
The brief filed today argues in its 1972 "Keith" decision, the Supreme Court ruled that domestic security surveillance requires prior judicial approval in the form of a warrant. The effect of the new immunity law is to overturn Keith and to dispense with this judicial gate keeping and instead to substitute the opinion of the executive branch that the spying is lawful. Thus, the Congress and the White House has unconstitutionally encroached on the well-recognized authority of the courts to determine when a constitutional violation has occurred.
"Instead of changing the law as is its prerogative, Congress simply attempted to substitute a Bush Administration interpretation of the Constitution for established law," said David Blair-Loy, legal director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. "This creates a clear and unquestionable violation of our fundamental principle of separation of powers."
Another area of grave constitutional concern for the ACLU is the FISA Amendments overly-broad grant of authority to the Attorney General to censor what materials drawn from the government's certification can be released in a public decision. The ACLU brief notes that under the First Amendment - and separation of powers required by our Constitution - only a court, not the Attorney General or Congress, can determine what information can be presented in a decision related to a civil proceeding.
"There is a critical First Amendment right to ensure that the public can access materials filed with our courts," said Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney of the ACLU of Southern California. "Courts must decide what materials can be kept from the public, not a political appointee like the Attorney General, who may be more interested in protecting a particular Administration than the public's right to know."
"Under our constitutional system, Congress and the Executive Branch do not determine whether actions taken by the Executive violate basic constitutional rights," said Harvey Grossman, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois and co-lead counsel for the cases combined in the San Francisco court. "Since Marbury v. Madison, we have recognized that only a court can determine the meaning of the Constitution - it is simply not a power granted to the Congress and the President."
This filing is in response to passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Amendments of 2008 which mandate that courts dismiss any cases against AT&T or other telecommunications' companies if the Attorney General chooses to file a secret certification attesting that the executive branch told the phone companies that the surveillance was lawful. Under the immunity provisions, the federal court does not determine whether the spying was in fact legal, but only that the representation of legality was made by the executive branch. The Attorney General has filed such a certification in these cases. This certification, according to the ACLU is not surprising, since the Attorney General argued for immunizing the telecoms in public statements and in testimony before the law was passed in public statements and in testimony before Congress.
"It strains credulity to believe that the same Attorney General who argued that immunity must be granted has fairly and completely weighed the interests of our clients in making his decision to ask the court to dismiss their case without determining whether any constitutional rights were violated," said Ann Brick, staff attorney for the ACLU of Northern California.
The brief filed today argues in its 1972 "Keith" decision, the Supreme Court ruled that domestic security surveillance requires prior judicial approval in the form of a warrant. The effect of the new immunity law is to overturn Keith and to dispense with this judicial gate keeping and instead to substitute the opinion of the executive branch that the spying is lawful. Thus, the Congress and the White House has unconstitutionally encroached on the well-recognized authority of the courts to determine when a constitutional violation has occurred.
"Instead of changing the law as is its prerogative, Congress simply attempted to substitute a Bush Administration interpretation of the Constitution for established law," said David Blair-Loy, legal director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. "This creates a clear and unquestionable violation of our fundamental principle of separation of powers."
Another area of grave constitutional concern for the ACLU is the FISA Amendments overly-broad grant of authority to the Attorney General to censor what materials drawn from the government's certification can be released in a public decision. The ACLU brief notes that under the First Amendment - and separation of powers required by our Constitution - only a court, not the Attorney General or Congress, can determine what information can be presented in a decision related to a civil proceeding.
"There is a critical First Amendment right to ensure that the public can access materials filed with our courts," said Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney of the ACLU of Southern California. "Courts must decide what materials can be kept from the public, not a political appointee like the Attorney General, who may be more interested in protecting a particular Administration than the public's right to know."
# # #
A copy of the brief filed in the Northern District of California in this matter can be found at:
http://www.eff.org/files/filenode/att/opposition101608.pdf
A copy of the brief filed in the Northern District of California in this matter can be found at:
http://www.eff.org/files/filenode/att/opposition101608.pdf
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3 Comments so far
Show AllGods Speed ACLU !!!!
I have been waiting patiently for my day in court. I have been under 24/7 surveillance for 23 months by local community watch groups. During one stretch of time I was followed by a dozen Verizon Trucks every day for 10 months.
I know my phones are tapped. The nature of my job made me a perfect guinea pig for them to test cross county surveillance and business wire tapping as I would work in many different offices every week.
The problem I have with all of this is that they have made no effort to hide their activity's, and because I did not understand what was going on around me, I felt that my life was in jeopardy.
In short, they practiced COINTEL PRO torture and slander tactics on me.
They tried to destroy me, and wanted me to behave like a delusional whack job.
It almost worked.Thank God for the internet,Common Dreams, Democracy Now, and every person that has ever posted information on COINTEL PRO GANG STALKING TORTURE.
Apparently, local law enforcement is using the IAFF and community watch groups to conduct 24/7 un-covert surveillance to create dangerous suspects by driving them crazy.
The right wing fake christian lunatic fringe is now using DHS NSL letters to grow a nation wide spy network.
I can not prove any of this without Freedom of information access to Verizon records of wire tapping.
I am waiting patiently. I am not interested in prosecuting the people who conducted the surveillance, just the leaders who called for my destruction.
All of this is very disturbing when you factor in the fact that this is happening to thousands of Americans so that local spy groups grow in size and power.
My case is unique , because I travel through more than three county's every day and a major city near Mccdill Air force Base Tampa. ( Command and control for Iraq war.)
This area is a hotbed for DHS,FBI activity's and its in sunny Florida.Which means they can fly their buddy's down to participate in training all year round in paradise. The crazier they made me the more I fought back. Thats another story.Lets just say, that when I figured out what was happening to me, I wanted to involve as many county's and people as possible in hopes that it would create internal jurisdictional issues when I crossed county lines.
Yes, I know, crazy. I brought so much heat on myself that the stress led to a heart attack. But 6 weeks later, I went back to work thinking that by now they must know I am innocent of what ever it is that made me a point on interest.
But it did not, because we now face economic difficulty's and lots of people are out of work, so recruiting is way up.
They seem to think they are immune from the law, thats why I think its the DHS that are leading this pack, and they must have told everyone I am a high profile subject of interest.
Car with sheriff sticker,IAFF stickers, Trooper Stickers are constantly aroud me, not to mention all the Jesus symbols on all these cars.
Go ACLU.
I've been wondering since the whole "retroactive immunity" thing reared its insidious head:
What the F&%K happened to Article 1, Section 9 of the U.S. Constitution. The part that reads (in part): The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it. No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
Ex post facto law is simply changing the legal consequences of an act after the fact. Why can Congress get away with this? Is there a constitutional law expert out there who can explain to me why this law could stand?
Is it simply that Congress' copy of the Constitution is missing that part, explaining why they also don't feel any reverence for habeus corpus?
And for further erudition and pleasure, I give you James Madison, The Federalist Number 44 (1788):
"Bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, and laws impairing the obligations of contracts, are contrary to the first principles of the social compact, and to every principle of sound legislation. ... The sober people of America are weary of the fluctuating policy which has directed the public councils. They have seen with regret and indignation that sudden changes and legislative interferences, in cases affecting personal rights, become jobs in the hands of enterprising and influential speculators, and snares to the more-industrious and less-informed part of the community."
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger
Evil has only one tool - that is the disruption of peace - it is applied in infinite ways but it is always the same tool - JC