US judge says NSA phone data snooping probably illegal

Published December 17, 2013
— File Photo
— File Photo

WASHINGTON: A US judge struck a first blow against the National Security Agency's bulk collection of phone records Monday, ruling it breaches citizens' privacy to a degree that is probably unconstitutional.

The ruling by the Washington District Court was stayed pending appeal, but if upheld it could lead to the spy agency being barred from indiscriminately gathering metadata on millions of private calls.

While not a final judgement, the ruling put the administration on the back foot at the start of what will no doubt be a protracted series of legal challenges to the NSA's global surveillance network.

And it was seized upon by fugitive intelligence leaker Edward Snowden to support his case that he is a whistleblower exposing official overreach rather than a traitor endangering national security.

“I cannot imagine a more indiscriminate and arbitrary invasion than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen,” Judge Richard Leon said.

Leon argued that American founding father James Madison, one of the authors of the US Constitution, would be “aghast” at the government's “Orwellian”breach of citizens' rights to privacy.

Contacted by AFP, the NSA refused to comment.

Two plaintiffs, Larry Klayman and Charles Strange, brought a case against President Barack Obama's administration after Snowden revealed the vast scale of the NSA's digital dragnet.

Documents provided by Snowden to the British daily The Guardian revealed that the NSA had compelled US telecoms giant Verizon to provide agents with its clients' call metadata.

Subsequent leaks from Snowden's vast trove of classified documents suggest that other telephone and internet providers have also provided private details on both US and foreign clients.

Leon's ruling would bar the US government from continuing to siphon off metadata without judicial approval, but he did not issue an immediate injunction against the practice.

Instead the case will go to appeal.

“In the months ahead other ... courts, no doubt will wrestle to find the proper balance consistent with our constitutional system,” he said, in a written judgement.

Obama's administration has condemned Snowden's leaks and insists that collecting metadata — the time, duration and destination of calls but not their content — is not unconstitutional.

US spy chiefs say that by joining the dots between archived calls and terrorist suspects they can keep America safe, but the Verizon case will not be the last legal challenge the program faces.

On Friday, an official panel handed Obama a secret review of the NSA's electronic surveillance program along with more than 40 recommendations to install safeguards and limit its scope.

But the administration is not expected to significantly curtail the NSA's mission, despite international outrage, and Snowden remains a fugitive from US justice granted temporary asylum in Russia.

Leon said the appeal process would take at least six months and delayed his order “in light of the significant national security interests at stake ... and the novelty of the constitutional issues.

”Snowden, who worked as a contractor for the NSA before quitting with a pack of documents, expressed satisfaction in a statement passed to the New York times by journalist Glenn Greenwald.

“I acted on my belief that the NSA's mass surveillance programs would not withstand a constitutional challenge and that the American public deserved a chance to see these issues determined by open courts,” Snowden said.

“Today, a secret program authorised by a secret court was, when exposed to the light of day, found to violate Americans' rights. It is the first of many.”The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which campaigns for Internet freedoms, also welcomed the ruling.

“It shows that the judiciary is looking at this program and does not agree that it is legal,” said EFF attorney Kurt Opsahl.

Opinion

Editorial

Price bombs
17 Jun, 2024

Price bombs

THERE was a time not too long ago when the faces we see sitting in government today would cry themselves hoarse over...
Palestine’s plight
Updated 17 Jun, 2024

Palestine’s plight

While the faithful across the world are celebrating with their families, thousands of Palestinian children have either been orphaned, or themselves been killed by the Israeli aggressors.
Profiting off denied visas
17 Jun, 2024

Profiting off denied visas

IT is no secret that visa applications to the UK and Schengen countries come at a high cost. But recent published...
After the deluge
Updated 16 Jun, 2024

After the deluge

There was a lack of mental fortitude in the loss against India while against US, the team lost all control and displayed a lack of cohesion and synergy.
Fugue state
16 Jun, 2024

Fugue state

WITH its founder in jail these days, it seems nearly impossible to figure out what the PTI actually wants. On one...
Sindh budget
16 Jun, 2024

Sindh budget

SINDH’S Rs3.06tr budget for the upcoming financial year is a combination of populist interventions, attempts to...