4 Ways Obama has Misled on NSA Surveillance
http://www.juancole.com/2014/01/obama-misled-surveillance.html
4 Ways Obama has Misled on NSA Surveillance
By Juan Cole | Jan. 18, 2014
(By Kara Brandeisky)
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1. There have been no abuses.
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In 2011, the FISA Court found that for three years, the NSA had been collecting tens of thousands of domestic emails and other communications in violation of the Fourth Amendment. The court ordered the NSA to do more to filter out those communications. In a footnote, Judge John D. Bates also chastised the NSA for repeatedly misleading the court about the extent of its surveillance. In 2009 weeks after Obama took office the court concluded the procedures designed to protect the privacy of American phone records had been so frequently and systemically violated that it can fairly be said that this critical element of the overall
regime has never functioned effectively.
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2. At least 50 terrorist threats have been averted.
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The record is far less clear. Obamas own review group concluded that the sweeping phone records collection program has not prevented any terrorist attacks. At this point, the only suspect the NSA says it identified using the phone records collection program is a San Diego cab driver later convicted of sending $8,500 to a terrorist group in his homeland of Somalia.
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3. The NSA does not do any domestic spying.
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The privacy standards suggest there is a backdoor loophole that allows the NSA to search for American communications. NSA critic Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has said, Once Americans communications are collected, a gap in the law that I call the back-door searches loophole allows the government to potentially go through these communications and conduct warrantless searches for the phone calls or emails of law-abiding Americans.Its not clear whether the NSA has actually used this backdoor.
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4. Snowden failed to take advantage of whistleblower protections.
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Former NSA employee Thomas Drake argues that even if Snowden were a government employee who went through the proper legal channels, he still wouldnt have been safe from retaliation. Drake says while he reported his concerns about a 2001 surveillance program to his NSA superiors, Congress, and the Department of Defense, he was told the program was legal. Drake was later indicted for providing information to the Baltimore Sun. After years of legal wrangling, Drake pleaded guilty to a lesser charge and got no prison time.
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