WSJ.com: “Spy Agency Activities Violated Fourth Amendment Rights, Letter Discloses”

WSJ.com: Spy Agency Activities Violated Fourth Amendment Rights, Letter Discloses by Sibhan Gornman:

WASHINGTON—National Security Agency spy activities on at least one occasion have violated the Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure, according to a ruling by the U.S.’s secret national security court.

The ruling, which was revealed Friday in a declassified statement, represented the first time the government has acknowledged U.S. spy activities violated the constitution since the passage of a 2008 law that overhauled surveillance laws following the uproar over the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping program in the George W. Bush Administration.

Note: The FISA court has issued one opinion, posted here. It operates virtually in secret. Only the government seems to know it exists. Search “FISA” on this website; there are about 20 entries. Some depressing. FISA operates largely extra-judicially with little control, and I recall, but can’t readily find, that the government admitted regularly violating FISA years ago in a letter to the FISA court.

On my drive to work everyday I pass by Metropolitan Tower, where, on the 39th floor, sits the chambers of Senior Judge Morris Sheppard Arnold of the Eighth Circuit. Hard to believe that it is one of the pivot points of the U.S. national security apparatus, but it is. He became the presiding judge of that court in May.

We shared a flight back to Little Rock from St. Louis after argument many years ago. He wasn’t on my panel. I asked him about whether he had any interesting cases. With a wry smile, he said: “Well, sometimes the government has to lose.” He’s a Republican appointee, like Souter. Every once in a while I run into him in restaurants or on the street.

Picture the HBO show “Deadwood,” and the FISA applicants are the cowboys and the denizens of Deadwood. He’s the sheriff. Way better than what we’ve had in the past, believe me.

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