techdirt: DOJ Headed By William Barr Asked To Explain Warrantless Bulk Data Collection William Barr Authorized 27 Years Ago When He Was The Head Of The DOJ

techdirt: DOJ Headed By William Barr Asked To Explain Warrantless Bulk Data Collection William Barr Authorized 27 Years Ago When He Was The Head Of The DOJ by Tim Cushing:

More than a quarter-century ago, then-Attorney General William Barr gave the DEA something it shouldn’t have had and something it certainly hadn’t earned. The War on Drugs was a forever war and it demanded an expansion of the government’s powers. AG Barr OK’ed it: the warrantless bulk collection of multiple third party records, including call records, banking information, and the tracking of purchases.

Twenty-seven years after the fact, the DOJ’s Inspector General released its review of these programs, finding they had been crafted and deployed with no underlying legal basis. Some of these programs are defunct. Others have been codified into quasi-legitimacy by War on Terror-related government power expansions.

Twenty-seven years later, William Barr is Attorney General once again. And he’s likely just as interested in expanding law enforcement surveillance programs (without worrying too much about how legal they are) as he was three decades ago. He has shown no love for the public nor their rights since he took office, making it crystal clear that neither the administration he works for nor the law enforcement agencies he oversees should be questioned by other branches of the government, much less the public they’re supposed to be serving.

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