DOJ: There's No Expectation Of Privacy In Your Phone Records Because People Don't Like Terrorists

from the um... dept

Following our post on the NSA’s document defending its surveillance programs, let’s look more closely at the Justice Department’s “white paper” explaining the legal rationale for scooping up all of the metadata on every phone call under Section 215 of the Patriot Act, also known as the “business records” or “tangible things” section. This document just focuses on that one program, rather than the many other programs, and within its 23 pages there are so many ridiculous things. I’m sure we’ll come back to many of them in future posts. After going through it a few times, it seems abundantly clear that this was a rush job by the administration to defend this particular program, without realizing just how ridiculous many of its claims are. As Julian Sanchez has noted, the arguments made in this document appear to contradict the DOJ’s actions in dozens of ways, and basically invalidates a ton of previous arguments concerning other surveillance programs. And, worse, it more or less opens the door for massive surveillance on a variety of other things. Again from Sanchez, the argument in this paper could easily apply to having a local prosecutor subpoena all city phone records looking for drug dealing. Because safety!

Let’s pick out just a few of the more inane arguments, starting with that first one highlighted above. As we’ve seen in the past, the DOJ makes a long and incredibly misleading argument about why your phone records aren’t private under Smith v. Maryland, but then it goes further to argue that even if a court were to say that Smith v. Maryland and the third party doctrine didn’t apply here, that’s okay, because the searches are “reasonable” because people want to be protected from terrorists.

… there is an exceptionally strong public interest in the prevention of terrorist attacks, and telephony metadata analysis can be an important part of achieving that objective. This interest does not merely entail “ordinary crime-solving,” King, 133 S. Ct. at 1982 (Scalia, J., dissenting), but rather the forward-looking prevention of the loss of life, including potentially on a catastrophic scale. Given that exceedingly important objective, and the minimal, if any, Fourth Amendment intrusion that the program entails, the program would be constitutional even if the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness standard applied.

Of course, as stated over and over again, there has yet to be any evidence presented that Section 215 did anything at all to prevent terrorism. So that seems fairly weak on its face. But, even more to the point, that justification is the justification for wiping out the entire 4th amendment. There’s an exceptionally strong public interest in stopping all kind of negative activity, so why not place a video cameras and a recorder in every private room in the country?

On to some other misleading points:

Courts have held in the analogous contexts of civil discovery and criminal and administrative investigations that “relevance” is a broad standard that permits discovery of large volumes of data in circumstances where doing so is necessary to identify much smaller amounts of information within that data that directly bears on the matter being investigated.

Not true. The situations they’re discussing are not at all analogous. Yes, in such cases courts will often grant broad discovery and investigations into specific crimes or civil violations, but that’s not what Section 215 does at all. It has been interpreted to mean that every record on every phone call is to be collected by the NSA regardless of any actual connection or indication of a connection to terrorism. That’s not the same thing. At all. That makes a complete mockery of the term “relevant.” Because when everything is “relevant” why even include the term relevant in the law? Just admit that you’re enabling fishing expeditions on all data.

Moreover, information concerning the use of Section 215 to collect telephony metadata in bulk was made available to all Members of Congress, and Congress reauthorized Section 215 without change after this information was provided. It is significant to the legal analysis of the statute that Congress was on notice of this activity and of the source of its legal authority when the statute was reauthorized.

And this is the other shocker. To translate, this is saying “because Congress did not explicitly tell us to stop collecting all data, we take that as implicit permission to collect all data.” As for that claim that this information was “made available to all Members of Congress,” that too is misleading, evidence by approximately half of Congress admitting they had no clue about this at all. Also, “made available” is incredibly different from “clearly informed and explained to Congress what we were doing.” Basically, they gave this info to the Intelligence Committee, who then sought to obfuscate it and play down any concerns. While others in Congress could ask to see the details (though, sometimes those requests are denied), they’re often not allowed to bring in staff who might understand the details, nor are they allowed to make copies or take notes. These members are shown documents that may not be clear and which they might not understand. That’s not fully informing them. And the resulting decision not to directly block that program is laughable because many in Congress flat out lied about these programs (or were totally misinformed). To take that as “approval” of these programs takes incredible hubris.

Only information responsive to the limited queries that are authorized for counterterrorism purposes is extracted and reviewed by analysts. Although the number of unique identifiers has varied substantially over the years, in 2012, fewer than 300 met the “reasonable, articulable suspicion” standard and were used as seeds to query the data after meeting the standard. Because the same seed identifier can be queried more than once over time, can generate multiple responsive records, and can be used to obtain contact numbers up to three “hops” from the seed identifier, the number of metadata records responsive to such queries is substantially larger than 300, but it is still a tiny fraction of the total volume of metadata records. It would be impossible to conduct these queries effectively without a large pool of telephony metadata to search, as there is no way to know in advance which numbers will be responsive to the authorized queries.

That 300 queries number has been thrown about quite a bit over the last month or so, but here they’re admitting that the number of records seen is “substantially larger.” I would imagine so. Now that they’re admitting they can look at almost everything, since with “three hops” you can cover most everyone. A study from 2011 showed that everyone on the internet was, on average, 4.74 steps away from everyone else. So if you can look out 3 hops, you can look at an awful lot of metadata.

Going back to the question of relevance, the DOJ again claims that Congress must have known that relevance under the law means “everything.”

Standing alone, “relevant” is a broad term that connotes anything “[b]earing upon, connected with, [or] pertinent to” a specified subject matter. 13 Oxford English Dictionary 561 (2d ed. 1989). The concept of relevance, however, has developed a particularized legal meaning in the context of the production of documents and other things in conjunction with official investigations and legal proceedings. Congress legislated against that legal background in enacting Section 215 and thus “presumably kn[e]w and adopt[ed] the cluster of ideas that were attached to [the] word in the body of learning from which it was taken.”

Right. How dare Congress think the word “relevant” as used in the law might possibly mean the same thing that “relevant” means in the English language. It should have known that the federal government uses a different definition of relevant, which really has nothing to do with relevance at all.

And, now, how about the DOJ completely reinventing the law so that it applies to future records rather than past records? That’s fun:

Prospective Orders. Section 215 authorizes the FISC to issue orders to produce telephony metadata records prospectively. Nothing in the text of the statute suggests that FISC orders may relate only to records previously created. The fact that the requested information has not yet been created at the time of the application, and that its production is requested on an ongoing basis, does not affect the basic character of the information as “documents,” “records,” or other “tangible things” subject to production under the statute.

Except, as some are pointing out, when the shoe is on the other foot, the DOJ directly argues that unless it’s explicitly put forth in the law, records requests do not apply to prospective orders. Here are the DOJ’s rules on FOIA requests in which it says future documents are not covered. Or how about the DOJ’s own guidelines for electronic evidence in criminal investigations. On pages 139 and 140 of that document, you can see it specifically says that requests for information “should not be used prospectively to order providers to preserve records not yet created.” But that’s concerning a law — 18 USC 2703 which also does not explicitly state it applies to prospective records. So why does the government say that it doesn’t apply to prospective records in that case, but magically it does apply to them when we’re talking about the Patriot Act. And, if the DOJ is relying on Congress’ knowledge of how these things are currently interpreted under the law, couldn’t Congress just point out that it looked at the DOJ’s reading of 2703 and believed that the administration would clearly know that just because it doesn’t explicitly call out prospective orders on future documents, that the government would know the law doesn’t apply to future records?

Honestly, this document is a mess. It’s clearly a whitewash job done to cover up the fact that this program is a massive intrusion on privacy and almost certainly both illegal and unconstitutional. Coming up with after-the-fact legal justifications for it just shows how desperate the administration is getting.

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Comments on “DOJ: There's No Expectation Of Privacy In Your Phone Records Because People Don't Like Terrorists”

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19 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Don't underestimate the depravity of lawyers

Again from Sanchez, the argument in this paper could easily apply to having a local prosecutor subpoena all city phone records looking for drug dealing.

Hey! That sounds like good idea! Think the judge will buy it?

Don’t ever underestimate the depravity of lawyers.

Tom says:

I wonder

I wonder if the study, that concluded that everyone on the Internet was within X hops of everyone else, included spam in its analysis. Suppose a spammer spams ten million Americans and one of those ten million is on the NSA’s list. By the NSA’s guidelines then those ten million are included as are all those they email. Spammer have a bigger list? Multiple spammers? “Hey Bob, program X needs justification to collect emails on another 100 million Americans.” “No problem, just dump all their emails to the fake spam program and include the emails of a handful of known threats. Program Y will automatically flag them for collection. Quick, easy, deniable.”

Anonymous Coward says:

Ironically when I read this I first thought of Rob Reid’s Year Zero and Nick Carter’s initial reaction to the aliens.
Carly: “We need a license to all of humanity’s music. One that will allow a rather large of number of beings to play it, privately and in public and to copy it, and to transmit it, share it, and store it.”
Replace music with every word spoken, typed, or transmitted, and pretty much I feel like Obama is some alien asking for the impossible from any sensible lawyer.

Anonymous Coward says:

People Don’t Like Terrorists

Well I for one am starting to warm up to terrorists.

I mean, they kill less people on average than police, right? And I like police. (The ones that aren’t corrupt or child molesters or whatever, anyway.) Plus, as an average American citizen, I definitely sympathize with the idea of being fed up with the current US government’s constant insanity. I can understand feeling that drastic measures are needed to change things for the better, though of course I personally disagree with the idea that violence is necessary.

And when the NSA sends agents to kick down my door, beat me senseless, and detain me (indefinitely, without a trial) as a potential terrorist for posting this, they’ll basically be proving my point.

Daemon_ZOGG (profile) says:

"There's No Expectation Of Privacy In Your Phone Records..."

The US NSA has been monitoring phone calls since the 1980s. If you want to just be anonymous, use a disposable cell phone. If you want anonymity and privacy, use a anonymous-encrypted proxy which resides in a country with a less than ideal relationship with the US. Then use an opensource, encrypted chat client/server or opensource VOIP softphone over the the encrypted connection to the proxy. And don’t forget to set your DNS lookups through your anonymous proxy service’s DNS servers. 😉

radix (profile) says:

I suppose it shouldn't come as a surprise...

…in this day and age when you need a team of lawyers and judges to determine what the meaning if ‘is’ is. The greatest tragedy in all this, to me, is that a handful of old guys can sit around and pat themselves on the back for coming up with a legal parsing of ‘Expectation of Privacy.’
If anything, the reaction to all this has shown that the people – drum roll pleaseexpect privacy.
Consent of the Governed my ass.

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