By Aaron Mackey
A federal court’s ruling earlier this week has blunted a key provision of the surveillance reform law that required the government to be more transparent about legal decisions made by the United States secret surveillance court.
After Edward Snowden revealed the government’s ongoing mass collection of Americans’ telephone phone records in 2013, Congress responded by passing the USA Freedom Act in 2015. In addition to limiting the NSA’s surveillance authority, Congress also clearly intended to end the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s (FISC) ability to keep the decisions it made behind closed doors secret.
Since its inception in the 1970s, the government has asked the FISC to decide what constitutional or other legal protections, if any, Americans and others enjoy while seeking approval of the government’s secret mass surveillance programs. Though we were not happy with many aspects of the final USA Freedom language, EFF was pleased that the final language did require that the government review and declassify “each decision, order, or opinion” that contained significant interpretations of the Constitution or other laws and to make them “publicly available to the greatest extent practicable.” We believe this language, along with statements from Members of Congress during the debate, clearly require the FISC to release decisions both from before 2015 as well as after.
Unfortunately, earlier this week a federal district court in California disagreed. Although the court did not rule on whether USA Freedom requires the government to review and disclose significant FISC opinions created before May 2015, it decided that EFF could not rely on USA Freedom’s transparency provisions while seeking FISC opinions as part of a Freedom of Information (FOIA) lawsuit. The ruling also upheld the government’s decision to completely withhold six significant FISC opinions based on the government’s claims that disclosing even a single word would jeopardize national security.
Unsurprisingly, we disagree with the court’s decision. One of the frustrating aspects of the ruling is that it allows the government to continue to ignore Congress’ clear command in USA Freedom to review all significant decisions by the FISC and release them to the public. This is important because we know that the FISC has authorized government surveillance that other federal courts found to be illegal, such as the mass collection of American’s telephone records, and deeply troubling, such as reportedly ordering Yahoo to secretly scan all of its users’ email messages.
The government has argued that USA Freedom’s transparency provisions only apply to decisions issued after the law passed in May 2015 and that Congress did not intend for the government to go back and declassify older FISC decisions.
Again, we disagree. The government’s argument contradicts the clear direction Congress gave in USA Freedom to review all significant FISC decisions. It also ignores the intent of Congress, as members who drafted and sponsored USA Freedom repeatedly stated that the transparency provisions were designed to end secret law created by the FISC. Even after USA Freedom passed in 2015, members of Congress called on the government to declassify and release significant opinions.
We think it’s outrageous that the Executive Branch has ignored Congress’ command. And we hope that as Congress considers ending the NSA’s mass telephone records program, it can be even more explicit in requiring the government to declassify all significant FISC opinions, perhaps clarifying that the word “each” means “every” and “all,” which is what the word actually means.
Although the court’s decision this week is a setback to ending secret law created by the FISC, the lawsuit successfully pried more than 70 previously classified FISC decisions from the government that the court issued after 2001. These decisions showed a number of troubling actions by the government and the FISC, including the fact that the court is so secretive that a service provider challenging a FISC order couldn’t even access the law the government was citing in legal papers as it sought to force the provider to comply.
Opinions disclosed as a result of EFF’s lawsuit show how the FISC itself struggles to get direct, honest answers from the government about misuse or abuse of surveillance the court had previously authorized. Other orders showed that even with direct authorization from FISC judges, the government abuses the powers it is granted to conduct surveillance, a troubling fact given that much of the NSA’s mass surveillance does not require individualized authorization by FISC judges. The opinions are publicly available here, here, here, and here.
Finally, although we are still deciding what comes next with this case, rest assured that EFF will continue to push for greater transparency from the FISC, including getting all significant decisions it has issued since the 1970s, and for an end to secret law.
Aaron works on free speech, privacy, government surveillance and transparency. Before joining EFF in 2015, Aaron was in Washington, D.C. where he worked on speech, privacy, and freedom of information issues at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Institute for Public Representation at Georgetown Law. Aaron graduated from Berkeley Law in 2012, where he worked for EFF while a student in the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic. He also holds an LLM from Georgetown Law. Prior to law school, Aaron was a journalist at the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson, Arizona. He received his undergraduate degree in journalism and English from the University of Arizona in 2006, where he met his amazing wife, Ashley. They have two young children.
This article was sourced from EFF.org
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