Thursday, February 20, 2014

Will US expand NSA surveillance?

The federal government may actually expand the controversial surveillance program that collects Americans’ phone records in a bid to preserve evidence for the multiple lawsuits filed against the National Security Agency, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. The decision comes despite President Obama’s instruction in a speech on American surveillance practices last month that government officials find a way to end the data collection program. Obama tasked Attorney General Eric Holder and members of the intelligence community with finding a way to wind down the government program without eroding the government’s intelligence capabilities. But, according to the Journal, government lawyers are worried that if they shut down the program, they could violate evidence preservation rules requiring them to maintain the databases amid ongoing litigation. Civil liberties groups like the ACLU and Electronic Frontier Foundation have filed lawsuits charging the surveillance program is unconstitutional. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has also led a class-action suit against the government program. In fact, concerns over the legal challenges could even effectively expand the phone record database. At present, the government only maintains five years of call data, purging older information at least twice per year. But the government may now opt to maintain that older data in the interest of preserving evidence. The concerns raised by the government lawyers are only likely to complicate the already difficult task of deciding how to wind down the metadata program...more 

That'll teach us private citizens who sue to protect our rights, now won't it.  Then there's this:

 The concerns raised by the government lawyers are only likely to complicate the already difficult task of deciding how to wind down the metadata program.

Complicated? Difficult?  Its called a plug...pull it.  

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