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#71
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Fred J. McCall wrote:
Thomas Schoene wrote: :Fred J. McCall wrote: : Kevin Willoughby wrote: : : :Have you read the Fourth Amendment recently? Unwarranted / unreasonable : :searches are clearly in violation of this amendment. : : And just what is being 'searched'? : :Our phone records. The courts have been pretty clear that the police :need a warrant to get a record of someone's phone calls in a criminal :investigation. The NSA records trawl represents a pretty clear violation ![]() Got any cites? The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act forbids the intelligence agencies from conducting any electronic surveillance of US persons without a warrant if domestic law enforcement would be obliged to seek a warrant for the same type of surveillance. The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 specifically sets a requirement for warrants for the use of a "pen register," which is defined as any device used to record phone numbers called by a certain user. This was done to override a 1979 court decision that had allowed police to use pen registers without warrants. Seems to me that the records of who you called don't belong to you. WHAT was said would seem to be covered, but marketers can get hold of a lot more intimate things. What marketers can get access to is irrelevant. The government is held to higher standards in many ways, because it has greater powers. All a marketer can do is annoy me or potentially rob me; the government can arrest me (or in this era hold me without charge). How is a listing of who you've called any different than a record of what web sites you've visited? It isn't. But that's not disclosable without a warrant either. -- Tom Schoene lid To email me, replace "invalid" with "net" |
#72
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Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote:
No, the problem isn't to refuse we're at war. The problem is that many us value our freedoms as well as our lives. As do I. But I don't place zero value on my life. |
#73
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![]() "jonathan" wrote in message . .. "Scott Hedrick" wrote in message .. . What makes you think there was no explanation? Makes me wondere how many other memos you didn't get. Next time learn to obey your noodly master a bit better. I heard yesterday it had something to do with his #3 and the Duke Cunningham bribery scandal. Why go on rumors? It's in the memo. If you didn't get it, then you're not on the list. |
#74
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Ami Silberman wrote:
I get the DoD 5240.1R brief every year, and it's pretty clear. You must have reasonable belief that a specific US person targeted for collection is in contact with a terrorist (or foreign intelligence agent, etc.) before you can collect on them. One of the fears is, that with this administration (or actually, many past ones), would be that they would be very interested in finding out who reporters talk to. I can see why they would fear that. It might actually plug some of the leaks. If these leakers, who seem to be more at war with the administration than with the people who are actually trying to kill us, were so brave, they would openly go to the papers, and not hide behind anonymity. |
#75
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![]() "jonathan" wrote in message news ![]() That really isn't the issue. It's that these are secret agencies If they were *secret*, you wouldn't know about them. |
#76
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Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Rand Simberg wrote: Are you asking why it *is*, or why it *ought* to be? It *is* because laws concerning phone eavesdropping are well established, There was no eavesdropping involved in the latest foofaraw. Collecting records of calls is not "eavesdropping." I deliberately said "phone eavesdropping" rather than "wiretapping" in an attempt to refer to all forms of covert monitoring of your use of the phone system, not just the specific act of listening to the calls. Clearly I should have been still more explicit for the slow learners. :-) As others have noted, there are explicit laws about collecting records of calls, not just about listening in. The thing is, the whole thing could have been done within the existing laws. With a recognized legal background and procedure combined with the current security situation, the odds of the FISA judged turning this down was remote. It isn't as much the actions themselves that present the problem. It was the circumvention of existing laws and procedures that established checks and balances that is the problem. The actions - as taken - have a much greater chance of not surviving any legal challenge on simple procedural technicalities than any other reason. Had they followed procedures, then it would be a court challenge on the underlying plan. That is a crap shoot, but the government stood a very good chance of winning. But, even if you agree with the policy as a judge, the laws are quite clear on the matter. To selectively not enforce the existing laws is judicial activism at its worst. The satellite photos seem to be legal and not require a warrant. That changes if they switch to IR or other devices designed to see through walls and obstructions. The legal requirement there is that anything that provides privacy at visible wavelengths is presumed to do so at other wavelengths also. |
#77
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... jonathan wrote: But doesn't anyone find it rather curious that Porter Goss suddenly and without explanation quits the CIA. What makes you think there was no explanation? Makes me wondere how many other memos you didn't get. Next time learn to obey your noodly master a bit better. I heard yesterday it had something to do with his #3 and the Duke Cunningham bribery scandal. Maybe I've watched one too many episodes of Alias. "SHE" is my only master~ Gee, I "heard yesterday" that you molest children, and probably with as much basis. Just because you're unaware of the true explanation doesn't mean that it lacks existence. Don't get too upset, Bush managed to push it off the front page with his 'emergency' deployment of National Guard troops to the Mexican border. Whew! I sure hope they get there in time. Nothing like having the troops come back from Iraq, just to sit under the hot southern california sun, so Bush can cut a deal on the immigration bill. I wonder what he'll do with the troops just before the next election? |
#78
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... Jim Oberg wrote: Yeah, but at the same time, don't we hear a lot of whining from Bushaters that he FAILED to take these steps to prevent 9-11? Yup. In their twenty-twenty hindsight, Bush wasn't doing enough dot connecting prior to 9-11, but since then, unaccountably, he's done too much. Hard to connect dots when you're not allowed to see them. I'll hold my tongue here and wait for the next scandal to come along. The way things are going for Bush, that shouldn't be more than another week or so. |
#79
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![]() "Scott Hedrick" wrote in message .. . "jonathan" wrote in message news ![]() That really isn't the issue. It's that these are secret agencies If they were *secret*, you wouldn't know about them. The nickname for the NSA is 'No Such Agency'~ |
#80
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jonathan wrote:
Yeah, but at the same time, don't we hear a lot of whining from Bushaters that he FAILED to take these steps to prevent 9-11? Yup. In their twenty-twenty hindsight, Bush wasn't doing enough dot connecting prior to 9-11, but since then, unaccountably, he's done too much. Hard to connect dots when you're not allowed to see them. I'll hold my tongue here and wait for the next scandal to come along. The way things are going for Bush, that shouldn't be more than another week or so. No doubt, since the media seems determined to manufacture them, from whole cloth if necessary. |
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