Aguila Blanca
Staff
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/12/nsa-phone-surveillance-ruling-101569.html
A New York judge has ruled that the NSA's program of telephony surveillance is not unlawful. This ruling conflicts with a previous ruling from another district that held the program IS unlawful.
What bothers me is multi-fold. Narrowly, this judge seems to be saying that (in effect) it's okay for the cops to search your apartment without a warrant and take copies of anything they want, as long as they don't look at it without getting a warrant. The 4th Amendment doesn't say anything about "looking at" things -- it says the gummint may not search or seize without a warrant.
More broadly, both this judge and the judge who found the program unlawful focused on and specifically addressed the collection of metadata. I suspect the government has gone to great lengths to convince both judges that "all" they are collecting are the metadata. However, my understanding (based entirely on having read articles about Snowdon's revelations) is that the NSA is NOT collecting just the metadata but, in fact, they are collecting the entirety of every call ... and they can then listen to any conversation at any time in the future.
In any event -- is this enough to get to the Supreme Court, or would both cases have to go through appeal and result in a split after the appeal level before we get to the SCOTUS level?
A New York judge has ruled that the NSA's program of telephony surveillance is not unlawful. This ruling conflicts with a previous ruling from another district that held the program IS unlawful.
What bothers me is multi-fold. Narrowly, this judge seems to be saying that (in effect) it's okay for the cops to search your apartment without a warrant and take copies of anything they want, as long as they don't look at it without getting a warrant. The 4th Amendment doesn't say anything about "looking at" things -- it says the gummint may not search or seize without a warrant.
More broadly, both this judge and the judge who found the program unlawful focused on and specifically addressed the collection of metadata. I suspect the government has gone to great lengths to convince both judges that "all" they are collecting are the metadata. However, my understanding (based entirely on having read articles about Snowdon's revelations) is that the NSA is NOT collecting just the metadata but, in fact, they are collecting the entirety of every call ... and they can then listen to any conversation at any time in the future.
In any event -- is this enough to get to the Supreme Court, or would both cases have to go through appeal and result in a split after the appeal level before we get to the SCOTUS level?