Lies the Government Is Telling You
By Andrew P. Napolitano
June 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Last week, Republicans and Democrats in Congress joined President
Barack Obama in congratulating themselves for taming the National Security
Agency’s voracious appetite for spying. By permitting one section of the Patriot
Act to expire and by replacing it with the USA Freedom Act, the federal
government is taking credit for taming beasts of its own creation.
In reality, nothing substantial has changed.
Under the Patriot Act, the NSA had access to and possessed
digital versions of the content of all telephone conversations, emails and text
messages sent between and among all people in America since 2009. Under the USA
Freedom Act, it has the same. The USA Freedom Act changes slightly the
mechanisms for acquiring this bulk data, but it does not change the amount or
nature of the data the NSA acquires.
Under the Patriot Act, the NSA installed its computers in
every main switching station of every telecom carrier and Internet service
provider in the U.S. It did this by getting Congress to immunize the carriers
and providers from liability for permitting the feds to snoop on their customers
and by getting the Department of Justice to prosecute the only CEO of a carrier
who had the courage to send the feds packing.
In order to operate its computers at these facilities, the NSA
placed its own computer analysts physically at those computers 24/7. It then
went to the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and asked for search
warrants directing the telecoms and Internet service providers to make available
to it all the identifying metadata – the times, locations, durations, email
addresses used and telephone numbers used – for all callers and email users in a
given ZIP code or area code or on a customer list.
The first document revealed by Edward Snowden two years ago
was a FISA court search warrant directed to Verizon ordering it to make
available to NSA agents the metadata of all its customers – more than 113
million at the time. Once the court granted that search warrant and others like
it, the NSA computers simply downloaded all that metadata and the digital
recordings of content. Because the FISA court renewed every order it issued,
this arrangement became permanent.
Under the USA Freedom Act, the NSA computers remain at the
carriers’ and service providers’ switching offices, but the NSA computer
analysts return to theirs; and from there they operate remotely the same
computers they were operating directly in the Patriot Act days. The NSA will
continue to ask the FISA court for search warrants permitting the download of
metadata, and that court will still grant those search warrants permitting the
downloading. And the NSA will continue to take both metadata and content.
The Supreme Court has ruled consistently that the government
must obtain a search warrant in order to intercept any nonpublic communication.
The Constitution requires probable cause as a precondition for a judge to issue
a search warrant for any purpose, and the warrant must "particularly (describe)
the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." Because this
is expressly set forth in the Constitution itself, Congress and the president
are bound by it. They cannot change it. They cannot avoid or evade it.
Probable cause is evidence about a person or place sufficient
to permit a judge to conclude that evidence of a crime will probably be found.
Both the Patriot Act and the USA Freedom Act disregard the "probable cause"
standard and substitute instead a "government need" standard. This is, of
course, no standard at all, as the NSA has claimed under the Patriot Act – and
the FISA court bought the argument – that it needs all telephone calls, all
emails and all text messages of all people in America. Today it may legally
obtain them by making the same claim under the USA Freedom Act.
When politicians tell you that the NSA needs a court order in
order to listen to your phone calls or read your emails, they are talking about
a FISA court order that is based on government need – not a constitutional court
order, which can only be based on probable cause. This is an insidious and
unconstitutional bait and switch.
All this may start with the NSA, but it does not end there.
Last week, we learned that the FBI is operating low-flying planes over 100
American cities to monitor folks on the streets and intercept their cellphone
use – without any search warrants. Earlier this week, we learned that the Drug
Enforcement Administration has intercepted the telephone calls of more than
11,000 people in three years – without any search warrants. We already know that
local police have been using government surplus cell towers to intercept the
cellphone signals of innocent automobile drivers for about a year – without
search warrants.
How dangerous this is. The Constitution is the supreme law of
the land. It applies in good times and in bad, in war and in peace. It regulates
the governed and the governors. Yet if the government that it regulates can
change it by ordinary legislation, then it is not a constitution but a charade.
Suppose the Congress wants to redefine the freedom of speech
or the free exercise of religion or the right to keep and bear arms, just as it
did the standards for issuing search warrants. What is the value of a
constitutional guarantee if the people into whose hands we repose the
Constitution for safe keeping can change it as they see fit and negate the
guarantee?
What do you call a negated constitutional guarantee?
Government need.
Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court
of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge
Napolitano has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent is
Suicide Pact: The Radical Expansion of Presidential Powers and the Lethal Threat
to American Liberty. To find out more about Judge
Napolitano and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and
cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2014 ANDREW P. NAPOLITANO – DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM