Mixed News on Wiretapping from 9th Circuit US Court 93
abb3w writes "The bad news: the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has ruled (pdf) that the Al-Haramain lawyers may not submit into evidence their recollections of the top secret document handed to them detailing the warrantless electronic scrutiny they received. 'Once properly invoked and judicially blessed, the state secrets privilege is not a half-way proposition.' The good news: they have declined to answer and directed the lower court to consider whether 'FISA preempts the common law state secrets privilege' with respect to the underlying nature of the program itself ... which also keeps alive hopes for the EFF and ACLU to make those responsible answer for their actions."
HALF-way (Score:1)
Re:HALF-way (Score:4, Informative)
2. proposition - (logic) a statement that affirms or denies something and is either true or false
Either this is secret, or it is not. There's no half-way secret where they can put their second-hand recollections in evidence. Of all the various things I've heard, this is most sane. Now I'm sure some here would argue whether there should be "state secrets" or not, but the only sane way to implement it is that whoever is given access is restricted from passing it on. Otherwise you could memorize it, record it to tape or whatever - because it's not the actual classified document, it's not classified? What the hell kind of sense would that make?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That's either silly if you don't like the state secrets privilege, and very dangerous if you do.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, in a technical sense, by definition it's no longer secret. But I'm thinking of a more narrowly drawn privilege than that. Here's the hypothetical: Someone is charged wrongly with murder. They have access to information that absolutely clears them, but it's been classified as a "state secret". Should the person truly be prevented from presenting that evidence? Should an inn
Re: (Score:2)
You see, things like this happen all the time. People of obvious guilt seem to either get off scott free and people with a huge suspicion of guilt don't get charged. We never hear exactly why they don't get charged or if they get some sort
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:HALF-way (Score:5, Insightful)
a) Black ops [wikipedia.org] - no judge, no jury.
b) Hold a trial, but don't reveal the evidence. Kafka already wrote the book [wikipedia.org] on this.
c) Reveal it to the defendant's lawyer under seal.
d) Don't do anything - let extremely dangerous men go free because being forced to reveal the information would be even more damaging.
e) Reveal everything to the public - but imagine putting top secret files someone stole into evidence, it wouldn't make sense.
There should most definately be laws against secret laws and secrets courts. Secret evidence on the other hand you can't really get away from and there's no ideal solution that completely serves all interests. Feel free to pick one or come up with one I forgot, but providing it to lawyers under seal is a compromise to serve two masters at once - to give the accused a fair trial and at the same time protect national security. The alternatives are quite frankly worse.
Option F (Score:4, Interesting)
So when a secret is revealed, someone does time for it. This would compel all government bureaucrats who aree in charge of secret projects to make sure that those projects do not get out of hand.
mod parent up (Score:1)
I'd like to hear a retired intelligence worker's (or a lawyer's) thoughts on this.
Re: (Score:2)
1) A judge would have to rule on the relevance of the state secret to the issue at hand. You couldn't be allowed to subpoena all the NSA's secrets because you had a speeding ticket.
2) Some may consider me to be a tad cavalier with state secrets. To those I say: the world is a dangerous place, so that sometimes state secrets and individual rights may come into conflict. How we handle that problem determines what kind of country we are.
If we subjugate the right to due process
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Logically speaking all criminal activity is secret whether it is carried out by agents of the government or private individuals working to their own purposes. There is never any excuse where criminal activity once discovered should not be prosecuted, that is a direct denial of justice and one of the basic
Our values dictate the guy walks (Score:3, Insightful)
Is the correct answer. In the absence of a trial and the admission of evidence to open court, the state has not proved that the man involved is actually extremely dangerous. The government cannot have it both ways. If it "knows" the guy is dangerous, then it can bring him or her to trial.
The best way to fight terrorism, is with terrorism. Yes, terrorism is an act of war.
Re: (Score:2)
They HAVE the document.... (Score:2)
The charity's lawyers still have copies of the document stored in the middle east. They know exactly what the document says to the exact number of recorded calls, when they were, & how long. They initially presented the original copy to the court, which was then reclaimed by the govt & declared 'classified' after being entered into the record. However, the copies sent to the charity's lawyers in the middle east still have copies of the document.
So in another declaration of stupidity, the US govt is
Re: (Score:2)
but the most important reasons is that this one particular case will end up vindicating the Bush administration of
Re: (Score:2)
The whole point is that without the FISA laws, the DOJ has to go through the regular courts to get their warrants. IE: FISA makes it easier for the executive branch to 'do their constitutional duty'. What this debacle is about is the executive branch ignoring their duty to observe the constitution - specifically the right to be free fro
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I will admit that I am not a constitutional lawyer. So I will defer to the wisdom of 2 constitutional lawyers - the AG and the Assistant AG at the time this whole thing broke - they both indicated that the NSA spying program as it was being operated was illegal. When 2 constitutional lawyers who know all the facts both declare it illegal, I tend to believe them over non lawyers armed wit
additionally (Score:2)
Suspension of Habeas Corpus is clearly identified in the Constitution as being a power of the Legislative Branch, not the Executive Branch. It was an unconstitutional overreach of Executive power from the git.
Re: (Score:2)
While I understand your trust in the fine representatives running the country, I also under
Intentional Legislation Trumps Common Law. (Score:4, Insightful)
e.g.: Statutory Marriage v. Common Law Marriage.
Re:Intentional Legislation Trumps Common Law. (Score:4, Informative)
Big Brother is my friend. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
A rather vehement strain of the meme:
"But BillJeff did it first"
which again provides anecdotal evidence that two wrongs do indeed make a righty.
Another lesson that has been finally ground into America's consciousness by the last seven years of governmental overreach is one that has been preached to us for over twenty since, since the Reagancomedy:
Republicans do it better the Democrats
This has now been demonstrably proven to be true in the instances of
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
besides, tax and spend IS a shitty economic policy, and the last few years are too complicated to really say how much better democrats would have done.
Re: (Score:1, Troll)
Such a short memory. What Republicans were complaining when DeLay wielded the gavel? None. Sorry pal, but just because fucking the country over turned out badly doesn't mean it has nothing to do with Republicans. Take some responsibility, like your Republican ideals might have you do.
Re: (Score:1, Troll)
I'm just stating a matter of fact, that republican methods of government are NOT the driving force behind why your country is so screwed at the moment.
You dummies voted GWB back in for another term, how about you take responsibility for THAT.
Re: (Score:1)
Because that's the only method he has for discrediting your very lucid post.
Re: (Score:2)
Whatever sense of republicanism you're using is irrelevant when you consider the context of current US misery is due to a particularly American flavor of that philosophy. Saying that republicans in other parts of the world don't subscribe to American Republican tenets is an exercise in irrelevance because foreign Republicans have not been elected into US Gove
Re: (Score:2)
I wasn't aware that I had supported tax and spend policies. I only stated that when compared to the Republican policy of Cut Taxes and Spend, it is the lamer of two evils. It is assuredly a more defensible position.
Re: (Score:2)
I think it's pretty clearly shown that 'reduce taxes and spend *more*' is an *amazingly* shitty economic policy.
flamed by a closeted grammar queen? (Score:2)
The modern Republican male role model in America
Love the 2008 RNCC Convention logo [impietease.com], BTW...
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Big Brother is my friend. (Score:5, Insightful)
Your opinion seems to be that of the majority in this country, and I believe that sentiment has a lot to do with how we have gotten to where we are, collectively. Do not attempt to raise an ideal higher than your personal interests. Just keep being passive. And remember: Consume, consume, consume! No one likes a louse, right?
Parody is not in the Dictionary (Score:1)
For extra credit, please compare and contrast the government as described in 1984 with one of the following:
1) the current Bush Administration or
2) the next administration if Giuliani wins
3) the next administration if C
Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
You aren't free if you are dead. Your patriot rhetoric is vacuous.
Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose.
But even if you and Janis don't see eye to eye, it doesn't matter. Because what's really going on is that people are choosing to live as cowards rather than live as free men. Worldwide, and even more so in the USA, more people are killed by bees than by terrorist attacks. Yet you don't see Big Brother calling for people to live in fear of bee stings do you?
So yeah, I would rather die a free man - a very old free man.
Re: (Score:2)
Regardless, it would appear that you and I have a different view of what being "free" entails, exactly. I am of the opinion that if someone is killed for excercising their intrinsic rights, then they die free, by the simple fact that they have resisted attempted enslavement. I assume that you believe otherwise.
Re: (Score:1)
Perhaps he would rather live a coward than die a slave.
Before claiming that we're not slaves yet, truthfully answer this: what are you truly free to do? What can you do that doesn't somehow, somewhere, require someone else's permission? Compare that list against the list of things that do require someone else's consent, and I think you'll find that the former list is woefully short. And that's here in the U.S., "land of the free". It's eve
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
You want true freedom? You may have it, you simply must signal your intent to not follow the laws of the land where you are currently at. Want to kill somebody? Go ahea
Re: (Score:2)
That statement's always funny coming from a paranoid liberal!
Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't realise I was being so selfish when I preferred my life and the lives of everyone around me over your privacy (as well as everyone else's). Apparently, if I want something different from you for everyone else around me, I'm being selfish, but when you want it, it's being altruistic and brave.
Re: (Score:2)
I am not a liberal. I am a socialist, and I am not paranoid. Thankfully, it has not fallen to the point that I should feel worried about my safety because of my political and economic views. That is not to say that it will not get to that point, however. It certainly seems that it will, and sooner rather than later, unfortunately.
You did not frame your origina
Re: (Score:2)
No, it really isn't. Passivity is when you see something seriously wrong and you decide to go with the flow. You haven't yet established that I see something wrong. My inaction
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
How can you have freedom without privacy? It doesn't make any sense. It's like saying "terrorists take away our cars, but the government only takes away our gasoline". One is no good without the other.
Re: (Score:1)
Amendment IV The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
This is all I could come up with after 5 second
Re: (Score:2)
Chance of BB taking privacy if it's accepted, 100%. Chance of BB abusing their ability to invade privacy in order to do other undesirable things, 99%. Chance of BB letting the government committing acts as bad as terrorists, maybe 50%.
Chance of terrorist killing you less than 1/10 %. Chance of terrorist taking rights and freedom from many people without
Originalize This: (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Jefferson felt that one of his failures was his not being able to get the wealthy to understand the merits of bearing the financial burden for the education of the poor. In 1776 he laid out a plan in the Virginia legislature which would have divided the state up into school districts. He also proposed two higher educational groups. One for a general University education and the other for advanced Science and Mathematical studies. He believed that these too should be available to all without concern for
A lot depends on the Ninth Circuit (Score:3, Insightful)
There remains the question of whether the SCOTUS will overturn any pro-citizenry ruling the Ninth makes anyway.
But the more that comes out before the Ninth, the harder it will be for Congress/SCOTUS to completely immunize the telcos and the White House.
I hope the clerks in the Ninth make sure the judges don't choose this month to switch to decaf! (There's an amusingly twisted Ninth-Circuit-judges-meet-Lloyd-Bridges-from-Airplane! visual in there somewhere....)
Keep believing the right things will happen and act accordingly.
Re: (Score:2)
But the more that comes out before the Ninth, the harder it will be for Congress/SCOTUS to completely immunize the telcos and the White House.
Not really. If Congress doesn't like how courts are interpreting the law, it has every right and the power to change that law. Of course, Congress should be doing this because they believe the people want them to do so, and it must not violate the Constitution when doing so. Also, the SCOTUS has full power to overrule the Ninth. Of course, SCOTUS is supposed to rule in way that is consistent with the Constitution but that is also a different question/topic. So my point is, the Ninth Circuit's rulings don
Re: (Score:1)
I think our difference is that while you consider whether the SCOTUS may rule (and the Congress and Executive may act) in a way consistent with the Constitution a different question, I believe it to be the very heart of the question.
Assuming Constitutional behavior on the part of any of the three Branches seems an unwarranted supposition these days (the three Branches and a free press exist precisely becaus
Re: (Score:2)
You're right in that SCOTUS can overrule anything that the Ninth Circuit may decide, but the interesting question--and perhaps what the OP is getting at--is, if the Ninth issues findings and/or judgments, does Congress have any recourse?
We know that you can not be charged under a law if the act you are accused of was not illegal at the time that you did it (ex post facto laws).
i'm all "tapped" out (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:i'm all "tapped" out (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, sure, that's just basic security. But this isn't really about the specific issue of telco complicity
Never Been Comfortable (Score:5, Insightful)
In any decently-run system, a claim of secrecy should be honored, but only as a stipulation that the opposing side's claims are true and accurate. In other words, a default judgement against the government in that case.
Justice should be blind, but not deaf nor dumb.
Re:Never Been Comfortable (Score:4, Interesting)
Are people just accepting of the fact that "State Secrets" also means "immune from opposition"?
"State Secrets" was formed as a dodge... (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Law suits would get pretty rare when nobody has to say anything bad about themselves... "What design documents specifying 40% lead in the paint of those toys? That is a corporation secret"
Still, why can't the cases be herd In camera [wikipedia.org] if there are secrets involved?
It's not like the 5th amendment at all.. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
The alternative is that the courts start locking people up for contempt of state secrets anywa
It's not bad news (Score:5, Informative)
All that aside, neither the govt nor the Al-Haramain lawyers actually want the top secret documents revealed. The govt because the information is top secret and would harm ongoing investigations; the Al-Haramain lawyers because even though the documents may prove standing the govt illegally wire-tapped them, would also show Al-Haramain's guilt in funding world-wide terrorism. Remember, copies of these documents were sent to Al-Haramain in Saudi Arabia - they could have been released already with no legal consequence by Al-Haramain in Saudi Arabia.
What Al-Haramain really wants is for the federal courts to restrict wire-tapping - any wire-tapping - as much as possible. Why? Take a wild guess.
Here is the best source for details about this conflict and Al-Haramain terrorism links.
http://www.zombietime.com/al-haramain_surveillance/ [zombietime.com]
where is the "NPOV"? (was: Re:It's not bad news) (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Fixed that for you. There is no way for us to know whether those documents contain actual state secrets. There is no-one who can check to make sure, even without telling the court. Even knowing if there are secrets in there is secret, remember? Trias politika, checks and balances, etc.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
The only reason the Al-Haramain lawyers don't produce a certified copy of the original is because they are being nice. Copies of all of the documentation regarding the orginal FOIA request were shipped to the middle east. They presented one of those copies to the court initially. They can produce a c
Hate to see... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Two simple thoughts... (Score:1, Interesting)
First: This is the 9th circuit. They are the most overturned court in the country, so nobody on either side of the issue should presume this is the final result.
Second: If you think of this ruling as bad news, let's try a simple thought experiment... The RIAA drags you into court and wants to introduce as evidence their "recollections" of documents that said what you did on the internet, what files you downloaded, and what files you shared. Should this be allowed? Should you have to answer this by providin
Bad news/good news? (Score:2)