DOJ Agrees To Release Redacted Court Ruling About How NSA Practices Violated The 4th Amendment
from the transparency! dept
You may recall that last year it was revealed that the FISA court (FISC) had determined that certain searches by the NSA under the section 702 program of the FISA Amendments Act were unconstitutional under the 4th Amendment. As we noted just this morning, it appears that the NSA’s justification for spying on Americans is related to this ruling. Ever since that secret ruling was announced, the EFF has been asking the government for a copy of it, via the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) process. The DOJ has fought very very hard against releasing this ruling, claiming that it would put us all in danger:
The government has determined that disclosure of the information withheld from Plaintiff could result in exceptionally grave and serious damage to the national security. Plaintiff obviously cannot contend otherwise. The Court accordingly should defer to the government’s determination in this case, uphold the Department’s withholdings, and grant this motion.
Except, today, during President Obama’s press conference, the DOJ suddenly (magically!) changed its position and filed a motion with the court saying that it will no longer fight this, but instead will release a redacted version of the FISC ruling later this month, claiming that recent declassifications by the federal government mean this is now acceptable.
Defendant further provides notice to the Court and Plaintiff that it has determined it will release to Plaintiff a redacted version of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (“FISC”) opinion previously withheld in full pursuant to FOIA exemptions (b)(1) and (b)(3), and a redacted version of the one responsive paragraph in the classified white paper to Congress also previously withheld in full pursuant to those exemptions. The information to be released to Plaintiff will consist of segregable information that the government has declassified and thus is no longer exempt under (b)(1) and (b)(3).
The filing also requests a bit more time to handle all of this, but it appears that revealing at least a little bit of info from this key ruling will no longer kill us all. And now we wait to see just how much is actually revealed… and how much is redacted.
Filed Under: 4th amendment, doj, fisc, foia, nsa, nsa surveillance, surveillance
Companies: eff
Comments on “DOJ Agrees To Release Redacted Court Ruling About How NSA Practices Violated The 4th Amendment”
Prediction: Entirely redacted
I’d be willing to bet that we won’t even get the metadata on this ruling.
Re: Prediction: Entirely redacted
Nah. I was going to make a “sobering findings” joke, but if the government is actually filing a motion saying it’s going to release them, then they probably are going to have a significant amount of non-redacted material.
Re: Re: Prediction: Entirely redacted
Like those ten black pages the ACLU got not that long ago?
Re: Prediction: Entirely redacted
“claiming that recent declassifications by the federal government mean this is now acceptable”
Which pretty much refutes the concept that the information would have caused harm. It was simply that they didn’t want to release it – which isn’t a legal reason for it to be classified.
Place your bets!
I’m willing to bet that the names on that document will be redacted.
The Courts findings are as follows:
█████████████████████████ We find ███████████████████
this ████████████ program ████████████████ ████████████████
███████████████ █████████████ █████████████ does ███████
███████ not ██████████████ violate ████████████ ███████████
████████████ ███████████ the █████████████ ██████████████
4th amendment. ██████████████████ █████████████
See!, We told you so!
Re: Re:
They’ll just make a few pages with black lines, duct tape them and fax them to EFF =/
How much is revealed
“And now we wait to see just how much is actually revealed…”
Not much.
“and how much is redacted.”
Pretty much everything.
i can see the document now:
Dear EFF,
Redacted, ——————————————
—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————Redacted,
Agent: “Sir, there are terrorists running around in the mid-east! What should we do?”
Director: “Quick! Dismantle the Constitution and spy on every American! That’ll show ’em!”
Mike,
I love how, even when you’re more transparency as you would like, you’re still a whiny little angry bitch.
Love,
AJ
Re: Re:
Oops. Should say “you’re GETTING more transparency…”
Re: Re:
First, we consider the source and its definition of ‘transparency,’ which doesn’t match with the English language.
Second, what the government says it will do, and what it really does do, are historically not in agreement. We will wait to see the follow-through, but we aren’t going to hold our breath.
Stop being a whiny bitch about people exercising their rights and discussing their disgust with the actions of the government.
Redacted defined as..
Redacted defined as: Information we do not like anybody but those people that agree with us and respect our desire to keep it from the uninformed and unreasonable masses.
And now we wait to see just how much is actually revealed… and how much is redacted.
I just took a massive dose of the spice Melange and am searching the most probable futures……..I can safely predict the answers are: a little and a lot.
Re: Re:
I can just see it, Emma on one side, Melanie B. on the other…mmmmmm…oh wait, you said spice MELANGE.
Re: Re: Re:
Communications for both the Spice Girls you mentioned will be completely OK to spy on because they are not US Citizens. Spying is A-OK, apparently.
Here’s the biggest problem:
“Plaintiff obviously cannot contend otherwise.”
Holy hell. “We made this secret. It is secret because we say so. There is a very good reason for it to be secret, but that reason is also secret. Everyone should just shut up and trust us, even though you have no reason to. There is no way to prove that anything we are doing is untrustworthy, because we have made all such proof secret.”