Title: The Right to Privacy vs. National Security
1The Right to Privacy vs. National Security
2Privacy Telephones (Recap)
- Federal Communications Act (FCA) (1934)
- FCC created. Prohibits interception and
divulgence of wire communications. (similar to
Radio Act of 1927) - Nardone v. United States (1937)
- Supreme Court Warrantless wiretap information
not admissible, nor is evidence derived from such
wiretaps, from FCA. - Katz v. United States (1967)
- a person in a telephone booth may rely upon the
protection of the Fourth Amendment. Wherever a
man may be, he is entitled to know that he will
remain free from unreasonable search and
seizures. - Allowed short surveillances of a few
conversations, if approved by a judge based on a
special showing of need. - Clarified by Title III (The Wiretap Act) of the
Omnibus Crime Control Act of 1968.
3Privacy Pen Registers
- (Pen register A log of all phone numbers called
from a particular phone. - Trap and trace A log of all phone numbers that
call a particular phone.) - United States v. Miller (1976)No constitutional
right to business records held by third party. - Smith v. Maryland (1979)Given US v Miller, pen
registers are not forbidden by the Fourth
Amendment
4The FBI Ignores Nardone/Katz 1940-1972
5From WW II on, FBI reinterprets Nardone
- 1940 J. Edgar Hoover pushes Justice department
to interpret Nardone to forbid intercepting
and divulging information. - 1956 FBI wiretaps NAACP and Southern governors
and congressmen - 1960 Atty Gen RF Kennedy taps lobbyists,
Congressional staffers, govt officials re
wiretapping.
6Nothing Changes After Katz v. USA (1967)
- 1969 LBJ taps Kissinger aide for 21 months.
- 1971 Nixon breaks into Ellsbergs psychiatrist
office, taps Ellsbergs phone. (leads to mistrial
against Ellsberg) - 1972 Reports by FBI agents on electronic
surveillance had caused the Department of
Justice deep embarrassment many times.
former Atty General Ramsey Clark
7Wiretapping National Security The other side
- In Katz v. United States, the Supreme Court
explicitly declined to extend its holding to
cases "involving the national security." - Congress in Title III stated that "nothing in
Title III shall . . . be deemed to limit the
constitutional power of the President to take
such measures as he deems necessary to protect
the United States against the overthrow of the
Government by force or other unlawful means, or
against any other clear and present danger to the
structure or existence of the Government."
8Congress Acts to Protect Privacy
9Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (1978)
- Electronic surveillance of foreign agents
allowed under secret court order, given probable
cause that target is agent of foreign power. - No notice need be given
- Evidence can be used in criminal proceedings with
qualifications. Any FISA investigation must have
foreign intelligence information collection as
its primary purpose.
10Secret Court Says F.B.I. Aides Misled Judges in
75 Cases
- By PHILIP SHENON (NYT)
- WASHINGTON, Aug. 22, 2002 The nation's secret
intelligence court has identified more than 75
cases in which it says it was misled by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation in documents in
which the bureau attempted to justify its need
for wiretaps and other electronic surveillance,
according to the first of the court's rulings to
be released publicly. - The opinion by the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, which was issued in May but
made public today by Congress, is stinging in its
criticism of the F.B.I. and the Justice
Department, which the court suggested had tried
to defy the will of Congress by allowing
intelligence material to be shared freely with
criminal investigators.
11After 9/11 USA Patriot Act (2001)
- Changes FISA standard to permit wiretap use when
collecting information about foreign spies or
terrorists even US citizens is "a significant
purpose," rather than "the purpose", of such an
investigation. - Authorizes "roving wiretaps" in foreign
intelligence cases meaning that law enforcement
can listen in on multiple phones and devices with
one warrant if the court finds that the actions
of the suspect "may have the effect of thwarting"
surveillance - Expands pen register authority to cover the
Internet, but forbids collection of "content"
under such orders allows nationwide service of
such orders
12ACLU Assessment of USA Patriot Act I (Will be
discussed in Fridays recitation)
- The USA Patriot Act allows the government to use
its intelligence gathering power to circumvent
the standard that must be met for criminal
wiretaps. The new law allows use of FISA
surveillance authority even if the primary
purpose were a criminal investigation.
Intelligence surveillance merely needs to be only
a "significant" purpose. This provision
authorizes unconstitutional physical searches and
wiretaps though it is searching primarily for
evidence of crime, law enforcement conducts a
search without probable cause of crime.
13ACLU Assessment of USA Patriot Act III (Will be
discussed in Fridays recitation)
- In allowing for "nationwide service" of pen
register and trap and trace orders, the law
further marginalizes the role of the judiciary.
It authorizes what would be the equivalent of a
blank warrant in the physical world the court
issues the order, and the law enforcement agent
fills in the places to be searched. This is not
consistent with the important Fourth Amendment
privacy protection of requiring that warrants
specify the place to be searched.