MintPress: Justice Dept Pressured To Release Document Proving Fourth Amendment Rights Violations

MintPress: Justice Dept Pressured To Release Document Proving Fourth Amendment Rights Violations under FISA by Katie Rucke:

A digital rights advocacy group is pushing for the release of a document that could shed light on the activities of the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which for years has quietly authorized both the physical and electronic surveillance of people in the U.S. without their knowledge.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is challenging the Department of Justice’s reasons for keeping the court’s decisions under lock and key. The group has requested the release of a secret document that details the government’s interpretation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978.

The public gained knowledge of the document last year when Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) announced that the court had ruled “on at least one occasion” that spying on American citizens, including under FISA, was “unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.”

Wyden didn’t share any specific examples or details of how the government’s surveillance was unlawful, which is why the Electronic Frontier Foundation decided to file a suit in district court to make the 86-page document public.

This was on Slate four days ago.

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