Top court to hear
arguments over government spying
By Terry Baynes | Reuters
– 10 hours ago
(Reuters) - A debate over
how freely the U.S. government can eavesdrop on international communications
reaches a climax on Monday in the country's highest court.
At issue is a law passed
by Congress in 2008 allowing the government to monitor the overseas
communications of individuals without obtaining a warrant for each target.
The government has said it
needs flexible surveillance power to help prevent strikes by foreign militants
such as the attacks of September 11, 2001.
But a group of attorneys,
journalists and human rights organizations has challenged the law, saying
thousands or even millions of innocent Americans are likely being monitored
merely because they are communicating with people overseas.
In oral arguments on
Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court will consider whether the challengers have the
right to bring a suit against the law.
The government argues
that, because the surveillance is secret, the challengers cannot prove they
have been harmed by the law and therefore do not have standing to challenge it.
The challengers argue that
they are harmed because they must travel to meet their clients and sources in
person, to avoid wiretaps. Human Rights Watch, one of the challengers, has had
to pay for more plane tickets, translators, drivers and guides because of the
law, the group's general counsel, Dinah PoKempner, said.
Although the question of
standing is a technical one, a victory for the government could end the
challenge to the law.
If the government prevails
at this stage, it will have shielded its surveillance laws from review by the
courts, said Jameel Jaffer, a lawyer who represents the individuals and
organizations challenging the law.
It's unclear how the high
court will rule. Since the September 11 attacks, the court has shown a
reluctance to intervene in the executive branch's national security and
intelligence-gathering procedures. The fact that the court took the case means
that at least four justices saw problems with a lower court ruling allowing the
case to proceed.
Congress passed the
original Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978 to clamp down on government
spying, which had escalated in the 1960s and 1970s. The law required the
government to submit a surveillance application to a special court for each
overseas individual it was targeting.
After the attacks of
September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush authorized the National Security
Agency's use of warrantless wiretaps in the hunt for people with ties to al
Qaeda and other militant groups. The Bush administration ended that program in
2007, but Congress legalized parts of it in an overhaul of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act in 2008.
Under the new law, the
government no longer has to provide the court with specific names, phone
numbers or email addresses of people to be tapped. Instead, it can apply for
permission to conduct mass surveillance merely by stating that it plans to
monitor non-U.S. persons overseas to gather foreign intelligence.
The challengers filed a
lawsuit saying the new procedures violate the U.S. Constitution's Fourth
Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizures by allowing the
government to sweep up communications with little judicial oversight.
One of the challengers,
David Nevin, who is a lawyer for the accused September 11 mastermind Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, said the 2008 law puts lawyers on the "horns of a
dilemma."
Ethics rules prohibit
lawyers from holding sensitive conversations with clients when there's a chance
the government is eavesdropping, he said. As a result, Nevin limits what he
says by phone and email and instead travels to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to talk to
his client. But those constraints can make it harder to provide the effective
legal assistance that ethical rules also require.
"We've gone back to
the Stone Age," said Tina Foster, a human rights lawyer who joined a brief
in support of the challengers. "It's like eliminating the benefit of
telecommunication and access to information."
In 2009 a federal district
court in New York found that the challengers failed to prove they had been
harmed by the law. But in 2011 the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed,
allowing the suit to proceed based on the plaintiffs' fear of surveillance and
the cost of trying to avoid it.
The government then
petitioned the Supreme Court, arguing that the challengers did not have
standing to bring their suit. To have standing, the challengers had to show
that their injuries were "actual or imminent, not conjectural or
hypothetical," the government said in its petition.
Six former U.S. attorneys
general have submitted a brief supporting the government, warning that allowing
the suit to proceed would open the floodgates to litigation that would risk
exposing state secrets.
The Justice Department
declined to comment before Monday's oral arguments.
In separate litigation,
civil liberties groups tried to hold phone companies including AT&T Inc,
Sprint Nextel Corp and Verizon
Communications Inc
accountable for helping the government eavesdrop on private conversations. A
federal appeals court in December found the companies immune to the suits, and
the Supreme Court this month declined to review that case.
The case before the U.S.
Supreme Court is Clapper et al v. Amnesty International et al, No. 11-1025.
(Reporting by Terry Baynes
in New York; Editing by Eddie Evans and Douglas Royalty)
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