Gov’t Sends Record of Illegal Wiretapping to Those It was Wiretapping…

Update I: Below 

Summary:

Prior to the recently passed Protect America Act, warantless interception of international communication was illegal. In 2005, the NSA allegedly engaged in such interception. The parties that got illegally wiretapped have taken the government to court. Now the government is saying that a court can’t declare the wiretapping illegal because the records of it are “state secret” or “privileged.” Oh, on top of that, in a 2005 press conference President Bush denied such warantless wiretapping ever happened.

Body:

There is something very bizarre going on.

As discussed a few days ago, the US Congress passed the Protect America Act (primer here). It allows the administration to tap international communications — without a warrant and without probable cause — even if one of the citizens is an American citizen on American soil, as long as the intercept is undertaken for foreign intelligence purposes and is “directed at a person reasonably believed to be located outside of the United States.” (reasonable usually just means if the law enforcement could think it, which I assure you they always can).

The Protect America Act is the new law of the land.

Which means that before this new law a couple of weeks ago, in order to do that kind of intercept, the NSA did need a warrant/probable cause. Therefore, if prior to early August 2007 the NSA made an intercept of American citizens without warrant/probable cause, it would have been illegal for them to have done so.

Well, would you be surprised that prior to August ‘07, the NSA did engage in precisely in such illegal activity? How do we know? Easy: the government accidentally sent a log of its illegal wiretapping to the people it had been tapping. Now that the illegally tapped individuals have filed a case for $1 million each, the government has come in and said: “Whether plaintiffs were subjected to surveillance is a state secret…and information tending to confirm or deny that fact is privileged.”

Uh. I think the govt would be better off defending themselves by invoking gnostical turpitude.

Anyway, al-Haramain, the Islamic Charity that was investigated for terrorism (indicted but not convicted), and was illegally wiretapped, was in court yesterday, and here is what happened:

4:00pm PDT

In the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation case, Assistant U.S. Attorney General Thomas Bondy (right, entering the courthouse) also says the case should be tossed. “The state secrets privilege requires dismissal of this case.”

Whether the foundation’s lawyers were spied upon, which is the subject of the case, “Is itself a state secret,” Bondy argues.

4:10pm PDT

Expanding on that theme, the government argues that the Al-Haramain case needs to be thrown out because the secret document that the government accidentally gave the foundation is so secret that it is outside of the case.

Bondy claims the plaintiff’s memories of the document can’t be allowed into the case because the only way to test them is against the “totally classified” document.

“Once the document is out of the case, which it has to be since it is privileged, the only way to test the veracity of their recollections is to compare it to the document,” Bondy says.

The lower court allowed the case to go forward based on the Al-Haramain Foundation lawyers’ memories of the document, but ruled that the document itself was not allowed into the case.

Judge Hawkins (left, file photo) wonders if the document is really that secret?

“Every ampersand, every comma is Top Secret?,” Hawkins asks.

“This document is totally non-redactable and non-segregable and cannot even be meaningfully described,” Bondy answers.

The government says the purported log of calls between one of the Islamic charity directors and two American lawyers is classified Top Secret and has the SCI level, meaning that it is “secure compartmented information.” That designation usually applies to surveillance information.

4:25pm PDT

Judge McKeown: “I feel like I’m in Alice and Wonderland.”

Eisenberg: “I feel like I’m in Alice in Wonderland, too.”

4:30pm PDT

Al-Haramain lawyer Eisenberg argues that the government’s rationale for dismissing the cases on state secrets grounds doesn’t apply to his clients, since they already know they were surveilled from seeing the secret document.

McKeown asks whether the foundation’s attorneys would have a case if the government hadn’t inadvertently disclosed the call log.

“We wouldn’t have known we were surveilled,” Eisenberg replies. “Had they not made a mistake and revealed it to the victims… who would be out here to sue?”

The results won’t be in for four months, though it looks grim for the Charity.

Many thought that the Al-Haramain plaintiffs, who look to be the only people in America who can prove they were surveilled without warrants by the government’s so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program, would be able to clamber over the legal obstacles standing in the way of getting a court to rule on the legality of warrantless wiretapping.

Instead, the court looks likely to throw out the Al-Haramain challenge because the government says the alleged surveillance call log is too secret to be used in court.

For background and timeline on Al-Haramain and how the charity got the documents from the government, go here.

The al-Haramain attorney had an interesting op-ed the other day, suggesting that President Bush himself was involved in covering up (lying) about the Terrorist Surveillance Program.

Eight words: “These calls are not intercepted within the country.” That’s how President Bush has described the so-called “Terrorist Surveillance Program” - the president’s warrantless wiretapping of communications between persons inside and outside the United States when the government claims a link to al-Qaida. The president said this during a press conference on Dec. 19, 2005, three days after The New York Times revealed the program’s existence.

But now it seems those eight words weren’t true. In fact, they concealed unlawful conduct.

It seems a potent argument, and one lawyers and the media are completely ignoring. Take the evidence on its face:

a) In 2005, NSA sends evidence of illegal wiretapping to people it is wiretapping.

b) President Bush says such illegal wiretapping never took place.

Uh, Gnostical Turpitde anyone?

Update 1: Apparently the new FISA — the Protect America Act — is retroactive, which means that even if President Bush knowingly covered up the warantless search in 2005, his actions are no longer illegal. Question, doesn’t that create a bill of attainder for those particular victims?

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2 Comments

  1. Muse
    Posted August 17, 2007 at 11:14 am | Permalink

    Dont all retroactive application laws raise “Bill of Attainder” questions? Hmmmm…interesting. I’m thinking of the Detainee Treatment Act and the govt’s argument that it applied to pending habeas petitions during the Hamdan litigation. This is where a Westlaw account would come in handy.

    This is an interesting post. The charity’s argument makes complete sense to me. How could the govt use the state secret argument when they already revealed the secret? Alice in Wonderland indeed.

  2. Cafe Alpha
    Posted August 22, 2007 at 3:11 pm | Permalink

    I remember the Regan administration had the NSA doing the same, (for less cause one assumes). I don’t know how the laws changed in the intervening time.

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  1. […] Inept NSA Illegal Spying and a Bush Coverup Filed under: America — eteraz @ 2:39 am Plural Politics: Prior to the recently passed Protect America Act, warantless interception of international […]

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