Friday, January 20, 2017
While you were sleeping
Judge Andrew Napolitano writes...On Jan. 3, outgoing Attorney General Loretta Lynch secretly signed an
order directing the National Security Agency -- America’s
60,000-person-strong domestic spying apparatus -- to make available raw
spying data to all other federal intelligence agencies, which then can
pass it on to their counterparts in foreign countries and in the 50
states upon request. She did so, she claimed, for administrative
convenience. Yet in doing this, she violated basic constitutional
principles that were erected centuries ago to prevent just what she did.
Here is the back story.
In the aftermath of former President Richard Nixon’s
abusive utilization of the FBI and CIA to spy on his domestic political
opponents in the 1960s and '70s -- and after Nixon had resigned from
office in the wake of all that -- Congress passed the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, which created a secret court that was
charged with being the sole authority in America that can authorize
domestic spying for non-law enforcement purposes.
The standard for a FISA court authorization was that
the subject of the spying needed to be a foreign person in the United
States who was an agent of a foreign power. It could be a foreign
janitor in a foreign embassy, a foreign spy masquerading as a diplomat,
even a foreign journalist working for a media outlet owned by a foreign
government.
The American spies needed a search warrant from the
FISA court. Contrary to the Constitution, the search warrant was given
based not on probable cause of crime but rather on probable cause of the
status of the person as an agent of a foreign power. This slight change
from “probable cause of crime” to “probable cause of foreign agency”
began the slippery slope that brought us to Lynch’s terrible order of
Jan. 3.
After the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,
numerous other statutes were enacted that made spying easier and that
continued to erode the right to be left alone guaranteed by the Fourth
Amendment.
The Patriot Act permitted FBI agents to write their
own search warrants for business records (including medical, legal,
postal and banking records), and amendments to FISA itself changed the
wording from probable cause “of foreign agency” to probable cause of
being “a foreign person” to all Americans who may “communicate with a
foreign person.”
As if Americans were children, Congress made those
sleight-of-hand changes with no hoopla and little serious debate. Our
very elected representatives -- who took an oath to preserve, protect
and defend the Constitution -- instead perverted it.
It gets worse.
The recent USA Freedom Act permits the NSA to ask the
FISA court for a search warrant for any person -- named or unnamed --
based on the standard of “governmental need.” One FISA court-issued
warrant I saw authorized the surveillance of all 115 million domestic
customers of Verizon. The governmental need standard is no standard at
all, as the government will always claim that what it wants, it needs.
All these statutes and unauthorized spying practices
have brought us to where we were on Jan. 2 -- namely, with the NSA
having a standard operating procedure of capturing every keystroke on
every computer and mobile device, every telephone conversation on every
landline and cellphone, and all domestic electronic traffic -- including
medical, legal and banking records -- of every person in America 24/7,
without knowing of or showing any wrongdoing on the part of those spied
upon.
The NSA can use data from your cellphone to learn
where you are, and it can utilize your cellphone as a listening device
to hear your in-person conversations, even if you have turned it off --
that is, if you still have one of the older phones that can be turned
off.
Notwithstanding all of the above gross violations of
personal liberty and constitutional norms, the NSA traditionally kept
its data -- if printed, enough to fill the Library of Congress every
year -- to itself. So if an agency such as the FBI or the DEA or the New
Jersey State Police, for example, wanted any of the data acquired by
the NSA for law enforcement purposes, it needed to get a search warrant
from a federal judge based on the constitutional standard of “probable
cause of crime.”
Until now.
Now, because of the Lynch secret order, revealed by
The New York Times late last week, the NSA may share any of its data
with any other intelligence agency or law enforcement agency that has an
intelligence arm based on -- you guessed it -- the non-standard of
governmental need.
So President Barack Obama, in the death throes of his
time in the White House, has delivered perhaps his harshest blow to
constitutional freedom by permitting his attorney general to circumvent
the Fourth Amendment, thereby enabling people in law enforcement to get
whatever they want about whomever they wish without a showing of
probable cause of crime as the Fourth Amendment requires. That amendment
expressly forbids the use of general warrants -- search where you wish
and seize what you find -- and they had never been a lawful tool of law
enforcement until Lynch's order.
Down the slope we have come, with the destruction of
liberty in the name of safety by elected and appointed government
officials. At a time when the constitutionally recognized right to
privacy was in its infancy, Justice Louis Brandeis warned all who love
freedom about its slow demise. He wrote: “Experience should teach us to
be most on our guard to protect liberty when the Government's purposes
are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel
invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to
liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well meaning but
without understanding.”
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