SAN FRANCISCO, July 4, 2008

Judge Rejects Bush's Stance On Wiretaps

Says Current FISA Law Does Not Allow Executive Branch To Overstep Law

  • Photo

     (AP)

  • Interactive Domestic Surveillance

    The debate over the Bush administration's controversial wiretapping program.

(CBS/AP)  A federal judge said that President Bush does not have the constitutional authority to overstep the law establishing the government's ability to conduct warrantless wiretaps on American citizens.

U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker on Wednesday said that when Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978 it established the "exclusive" means for engaging in wiretaps, and that the president in his capacity as commander in chief could not evade that law.

At the same time, Judge Walker barred the U.S. branch of the now-defunct Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, an Islamic charity based in Ashland, Calif., from using a top secret document to push forward its lawsuit challenging the government's surveillance of that group.

He gave the foundation 30 days to refile its lawsuit with other evidence proving it was a surveillance target.

The Al Haramain's lawyers had claimed federal officials illegally eavesdropped on their telephone calls without court approval under the administration's so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program.

At the heart of the challenge was a top secret call log that the Treasury Department accidentally turned over to Al Haramain's lawyers, who say it showed government terrorist hunters listened to their phone conversations with foundation officials living in Saudi Arabia.

Al Haramain lawyer Jon Eisenberg last year told Walker that the lawsuit is dead without the use of the call log to prove illegal surveillance.

But several public disclosures about the Bush administration surveillance program in general and about the charity's role in particular since then could help Al Haramain lawyers prove their case, Eisenberg said after the ruling was issued late Wednesday.

Government lawyers did not immediately return a call for comment.

Last year, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also barred the foundation lawyers from using the log as evidence after the Bush administration invoked the so-called state secrets privilege, arguing that to do so would harm national security interests.

But the appeals court sent the case back to Walker to determine if the privilege is trumped by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The act, known as FISA, was passed by Congress in 1978 and requires government investigators to obtain a warrant from a secret court in Washington to conduct electronic eavesdropping of suspected terrorists inside the country.

Walker did rule that FISA does trump the state secrets privilege:
"Congress included in the FISA bill a declaration that the FISA regime, together with the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 … were to be the “exclusive means” by which domestic electronic surveillance for national security purposes could be conducted. … This provision and its legislative history left no doubt that Congress intended to displace entirely the various warrantless wiretapping and surveillance programs undertaken by the executive branch and to leave no room for the president to undertake warrantless surveillance in the domestic sphere in the future.
However, Walker still barred Al Haramain's lawyers from using the National Security Agency call log they accidentally received.

While conceding Walker's ruling was a setback for his client, Eisenberg contended the government also suffered a loss when Walker ruled that FISA trumps the government's ability to invoke the so-called state secret privilege, as it did in the Al Haramain case.

"The broader picture is that this is a big loss for the government," Eisenberg said.

That aspect of Walker's ruling could boost some 40 other cases pending against telecommunication companies that allegedly cooperated with the government's warrantless wiretapping program. The government is also invoking the state secrets privilege as it seeks to toss out those lawsuits.

Congress, however, is scheduled next week to vote on whether to grant the companies legal protection from those lawsuits.

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Add a Comment See all 298 Comments
by neobrian-2009 July 4, 2008 8:34 AM PDT
TOO BAD Shrub !!!!
LAWS are For Everyone ! Even CRIMINALS ,like W !
This Judge IS The Man !
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad July 4, 2008 8:42 AM PDT
START WAR CRIMES TRIALS NOW!

AMERICA STAND UP OR SHUT UP!
Reply to this comment
by a8151947 July 4, 2008 8:46 AM PDT
Speaking of Idiots. ------------------- How About That CBS ----?
Reply to this comment
by sleepyric July 4, 2008 8:46 AM PDT
Hooray!....must one of them d@mned "activist judges"!
Reply to this comment
by samthetvcat July 4, 2008 8:54 AM PDT
pt 1

---"At the same time, Judge Walker barred the U.S. branch of the now-defunct Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, an Islamic charity based in Ashland, Calif., from using a top secret document to push forward its lawsuit challenging the government''s surveillance of that group."---

Yeah, I agree with everybody else''s assessments. The politicians make it sound like the exigent circumstances exception they''ve carved out is akin to the one for the 4th in criminal cases, but the guard against abuse of THAT loophole is that exigent circumstances actually exist in a way that police can later demonstrate in a court of law where those who have their privacy invaded are ultimately given their day in court. So like there''s transparency and consequences for those in power.

Here, the exigent circumstances exception seems more like the Iraq war whereby it grants Shrub the ability to do anything he wants and it doesn''t matter whether there''s justification to support his invasions into peoples privacy

Interesting to see we''re all united on this - red states and blue states - against the government.
Reply to this comment
by mcvet July 4, 2008 9:05 AM PDT
I wonder who will Pardon the Criminal who broke the law. Will Obama? NO! Will McSame? YES!
Reply to this comment
by ioweign July 4, 2008 9:08 AM PDT
Correction:

Only idiots believe the new FISA law provides any wiretapping restraint whatsoever.

People must be laughing their heads off at the way the American people are completely played for fools by this law.

It doesn''t help that the news organizations like CBS couldn''t be bothered to tell people what the law says or actually means in practice.


Posted by CBS_Oliver at 08:38 AM : Jul 04, 2008
##
It doesn''t help that the news organizations like CBS couldn''t be bothered to tell people what the law says or actually means in practice.
##

Hey - just look at how the shrub interpreted the FISA act and you want CBS to be your legal eagles. Be thankful that we have the American Civil Liberties Union and CBS does report about their watchful eye...

Reply to this comment
by gkc99 July 4, 2008 9:08 AM PDT
It sure is encouraging how Nancy Pelosi rolled over like a dog asking for a biscuit on the FISA law.

Pelosi must go. A few pats on the head from Bushit, and she''s like a little lap dog. Dianne Feinstein ditto.
Reply to this comment
by inventagod2 July 4, 2008 9:51 AM PDT

Still sucks being a fearful NeoCon...
Reply to this comment
by mh4cbs1 July 4, 2008 10:05 AM PDT
Love America ??

JAIL Bush

Torture Cheney
Reply to this comment
by mh4cbs1 July 4, 2008 10:06 AM PDT
Want to send Pelosi a message ?

Contribute to Anit-War hero Cindy Sheehan''s campaign!

www.cindyforcongress.org
Reply to this comment
by wdrussell1 July 4, 2008 10:26 AM PDT
Doing all of these things within the law is so easy an idiot coud do them.
Guess that proves that George doesn''t have the brains to be an idiot.
Reply to this comment
by ljljaz July 4, 2008 10:39 AM PDT
America will stand up to protect Bush. He''s protected us. Thank you President Bush! Watch out bench legislating judges, Americans got there eye on you.
Bush, you are a good president.
Reply to this comment
by smurfcrusher July 4, 2008 10:40 AM PDT
Clearly the courts understand King George at last.

His attempts to subvert the Constitution are thus doomed to fail.

Reply to this comment
by smurfcrusher July 4, 2008 10:44 AM PDT
"Congress, however, is scheduled next week to vote on whether to grant the companies legal protection from those lawsuits."

If they do, they take the teeth out of the law and remove any deterrent from future illegal activities.

I would remind our readers that Quest defied the illegal requests of this administration.
The others should not be doing business.
Reply to this comment
by smurfcrusher July 4, 2008 10:45 AM PDT
Happy 4th, Shrub!

Looks like this country''s future is getting brighter.
Reply to this comment
by inventagod2 July 4, 2008 10:50 AM PDT
Hey, Bu$h -

The 4th of July

Stands for FREEDOM

and HEROS who went to war


not AWOL coward NeoCons
Reply to this comment
by caliguy55 July 4, 2008 10:51 AM PDT
There is no doubt that the blithering idiot in the White House and all those who assisted him in conducting wiretaps without court-approved warrants clearly violated the law. Certainly, like anyone else they should be punished. However, people should quit blaming the Democratic Congress for the problems created by Bush''s policies. In the Senate, it takes 60 votes to move legislation forward. There are 49 Democratic Senators and 49 Republican Senators with 2 Independent Senators who "caucus" with the Democrats govern them a slim 1 vote majority. The Republicans are thus able to obstruct any piece of legislation that comes before the Senate unless the Democrats with the help of Republican defectors can muster 60 votes. As one would expect, this doesn''t happen very often. This is the main reason why Sen. Obama was forced to support FISA, which was about to expire and leave the United States vulnerable to foreign attacks by crippling our intelligence agencies. Rather than leave our country in such a vulnerable position, Sen. Obama decided to vote for this legislation because the proposition that "something is better than nothing" was true in this situation. The remedy -- help elect a Democratic Senate that has a super majority (60 Senators or more) and Sen. Obama for President. At that point, the GOP and the morons of which it is composed will no longer be able to stop progressive legislation needed to fix our country before it self-destructs.
Reply to this comment
by ljljaz July 4, 2008 10:51 AM PDT
By the way, has CBS done a full news investigation on the Obamas team, there rat infested houses left in limbo in Chicago, and the $200,000.00 Tony Rez gave Obama campaign well the rats filled the city. Or if Obama will pay for all of Americas exterminating costs with the one trillion tax increase, tax pork I mean. Rats, now thats news.
Reply to this comment
by lorinkundert July 4, 2008 10:53 AM PDT
Congress has no Constitutional power to grant immunity for crimes already committed, protecting the telecom industry just simply is not legal.
Reply to this comment
by liberalme July 4, 2008 10:58 AM PDT
America will stand up to protect Bush. He''''s protected us. Thank you President Bush! Watch out bench legislating judges, Americans got there eye on you.
Bush, you are a good president.

Posted by LJLJAZ at 10:39 AM : Jul 04, 2008

This power hungry imbecile isn''t good enough to preside over cow dung.

Thank you Judge Walker, at least someone knows something about that&^%#@% piece of paper we call the Constitution!
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 July 4, 2008 11:02 AM PDT
America will stand up to protect Bush. He''''''''s protected us. Thank you President Bush! Watch out bench legislating judges, Americans got there eye on you.
Bush, you are a good president.

Posted by LJLJAZ at 10:39 AM : Jul 04, 2008

Give me a break...

BTW - it''s ''their'' not ''there'' . I weep for the future.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:05 AM PDT
It will interesting to see what the public will think about Obama in office when we have another 9/11. Who''s fault will it be from lack of knowledge the attack was eminent? The ACT of 1968 can no longer apply in the 21st century against an unseen enemy that everyone knows has one goal...Make The World Islam. The gov isn''t "listening in" on Susie in Ohio call to Aunt Jane in Kansas! If you''re not involved in terrorist activities and calling abroad, why would you care what the gov heard? If we''re going to move back into the 60''s, we''ll have to have Segregation...heck, let''s have another Woodstock!
Use common sense people.
Reply to this comment
by inventagod2 July 4, 2008 11:06 AM PDT
Bravo, caliguy55 - great post!

Now if you could dumb it down to appeal to the Spongebob NeoCon crowd, we could move forward as a nation...
Reply to this comment
by wdrussell1 July 4, 2008 11:14 AM PDT
patriot_tx1 you have managed to embarrass America and the word patriot in one post.
Reply to this comment
by rudy654-2009 July 4, 2008 11:16 AM PDT
It will interesting to see what the public will think about Obama in office when we have another 9/11.
****************

Boy, you would like that, wouldn''t you? I mean, Bush was President and he had plenty of warning including when he was in Europe at one of the Big G-8 meetings and they wouldn''t even let planes fly because of the threat. Yet, your tin god let it all happen without winking not even once. And not once did you hold him responsible, not even for having the perps on a terrorist watchlist while roaming the country freely to learn how to fly planes and not land them.

Yep, you people like that kind of thing, don''t you?
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:18 AM PDT
WDRussell1 ... of course that''s all you can come back with since you know what I said is TRUE.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:20 AM PDT
Bush was in office ..what, 9 months before 9/11. Clinton knew about Osama for how many years?
Yeah
Reply to this comment
by caliguy55 July 4, 2008 11:20 AM PDT
It will interesting to see what the public will think about Obama in office when we have another 9/11. Who''''s fault will it be from lack of knowledge the attack was eminent? The ACT of 1968 can no longer apply in the 21st century against an unseen enemy that everyone knows has one goal...Make The World Islam. The gov isn''''t "listening in" on Susie in Ohio call to Aunt Jane in Kansas! If you''''re not involved in terrorist activities and calling abroad, why would you care what the gov heard? If we''''re going to move back into the 60''''s, we''''ll have to have Segregation...heck, let''''s have another Woodstock!
Use common sense people.

I believe you could use a good dose of common sense with a heaping helping of intelligence. What do you say of Bush, who was IN office on 9/11, and the fact that he was so engrossed with his "domestic" agenda that he didn''t know and really didn''t care about foreign threats brought to his attention by the outgoing Clinton Administration and his own appointees to head our intelligence agencies. Remember the infamous August 8, 2001, incident, when Bush was told that a foreign attack on the United States was imminent, but chose to stay in Crawford playing golf.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:22 AM PDT
What year was it that Clinton had Bin Laden in the rifle scope and called the shot off?
Reply to this comment
by actornaught July 4, 2008 11:23 AM PDT
Posted by rudy654 at 11:16 AM : Jul 04, 2008

p_tx needs it explained more simply.

Oh! 9/11 happened during a republican presidency!

Look! 9/11 happened during a republican majority congress!

See! Over 4000 americans have died in iraq for nothing related to 9/11!

not sure if that''ll work, either...
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:27 AM PDT
Explain Vietnam? Who ordered us there? For what? How many died for nothing?
Reply to this comment
by actornaught July 4, 2008 11:30 AM PDT
Posted by patriot_tx1 at 11:22 AM : Jul 04, 2008

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Infinite_Reach

"The August 1998 bombings of Afghanistan and Sudan (code-named Operation Infinite Reach by the United States) were American cruise missile strikes on terrorist bases in Afghanistan and a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan on August 20, 1998. The attack was in retaliation for the bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania which killed 224 people (including 12 Americans) and injured 5,000 others."

BUT, led by hate-radio, the republican held congress was more interested in talking about Bill''s peniss.

How quickly you ''cons forget...
Reply to this comment
by wdrussell1 July 4, 2008 11:31 AM PDT
Since you asked.
Truman refused to help the Vietmanese.
Eisenhower sent the first troops in''
Kennedy stayed the coarse.
Johnson made things worse.
Nixon finally stopped the madness when he saw it was tearing America apart.
All56,000 died for nothing.

Reply to this comment
by actornaught July 4, 2008 11:34 AM PDT
Posted by WDRussell1 at 11:31 AM : Jul 04, 2008

No more dominos fell.

But the ''cons have forgotten that tragic lesson, and want to choke the US to death while they play games in Iraq.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:37 AM PDT
BUT, led by hate-radio, the republican held congress was more interested in talking about Bill''''s peniss


actornaught at 11:30 AM

So now you have gone from blaming the reps to blaming the radio? ROFL! Thanks for bring that up. Demo Bill was way to busy getting his blow instead of worrying about Bin Laden.
Reply to this comment
by dowjones20k July 4, 2008 11:38 AM PDT
Ya have to love the 9th circut and all the idiots who immulate the morons who sit on the court ..

Can anyone say what was accomplished here? Other than Judge Walker basically vacating his own ruling and forcing the plantiff to have no case?

Personally, I have NO problems with any over seas phone call being monitored, particularly middle east way ..

I hope all of you bleeding heart "progressives" (media included) get your wish and Obama the great black (maybe not 100%) hope wins in November .. maybe then we can stop the silly notion that America is perfect and we have no problems with our population.

We will then see how Obama and his minions handle the parts of the world that despised western culture well before bush took office .. Will all of you blame Obama for that? I doubt it ..

Your simple minded illusions that the world is ready to play nice is naive and dangerous ... we will all suffer from the stupidity and irresponsible election of a silver tongued devil who has illusions of grandeur on how persuasive his oratory skills will be with our sworn enemies ...

You all better start saving your pennies .. because after you elect Obama that''s all your going to have ... pennies and pain.

November will be the day of reckoning for all of us.


Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:39 AM PDT
BINGO! demo KENNEDY stayed the course.......
Reply to this comment
by actornaught July 4, 2008 11:42 AM PDT
Posted by patriot_tx1 at 11:37 AM : Jul 04, 2008

I answered your question, links and all, and you went off into irrelevant fantasyland.

You ''cons sure love talking about Bill''s peniss...
Reply to this comment
by singingrick July 4, 2008 11:46 AM PDT



Bush thinks wiping your @ss with the constitution is an "executive privilege".


Reply to this comment
by oneamerican- July 4, 2008 11:47 AM PDT
The Supreme Courts recent 5-4 ruling, providing terrorists with the same rights as American citizens, and allowing for the possiblity of terrorists being set free in our country, is a prime example of the catastrophy brought on by liberal thinking.

Liberals, no matter the circumstance, believe in a world utopia where peace is aquired wholly by capitulation to outside demands.

Nothing could be further from the truth, or more dangerous to believe.

This is why liberals have no place in America''s future - because with liberals making America policy, America will have no future.
Reply to this comment
by thickredhair July 4, 2008 11:48 AM PDT
bush is looking up the word ''constitutional''
Reply to this comment
by actornaught July 4, 2008 11:52 AM PDT
...Nothing could be further from the truth, or more dangerous to believe...
Posted by OneAmerican- at 11:47 AM : Jul 04, 2008

This part of this post best describes the weird knee-jerk ''con-speak of the rest of the post.
Reply to this comment
by erichsh July 4, 2008 11:52 AM PDT
Not to worry. Once Barack OBushit gets elected, he''ll continue the same wiretapping policies.
Reply to this comment
by l8c6 July 4, 2008 11:53 AM PDT
It can be said they can''t all they want but they do and they will. The internet developed under public funding is run by oligarchs empowered by corporate charters. Viacom just won the right to wiretap. Any time ones activity is monitored over the internet by those with the capacity to do so, you''ve been wire tapped.
Reply to this comment
by wdrussell1 July 4, 2008 11:55 AM PDT
erichsh, McCain and Obama are wrong on this. That you should worry about.
Reply to this comment
by liberalme July 4, 2008 11:55 AM PDT
What year was it that Clinton had Bin Laden in the rifle scope and called the shot off?

Posted by patriot_tx1

And how many times since 911 has our military had Bin Laden in their scope and were told by the AWhite House to back off? Too many to count--which lends one to really believe, Bush never wanted to get Bin Laden in the first place--wonder why? Could it be that 911 was just a diversion to invade Iraq?

A real "patriot" doesn''t defend a deliberate killer and liar, that would make him complicit.
Reply to this comment
by liberalme July 4, 2008 11:57 AM PDT
This is why liberals have no place in America''''s future - because with liberals making America policy, America will have no future.

Posted by OneAmerican

And with the current neocons in power, there will be no America.
Reply to this comment
by patriot_tx1 July 4, 2008 11:58 AM PDT
A real "patriot" doesn''''t defend a deliberate killer and liar, that would make him complicit.

liberalme at 11:55 AM

-----------
THANK YOU! You just described Obama to the T!
Reply to this comment
by erichsh July 4, 2008 11:58 AM PDT
erichsh, McCain and Obama are wrong on this. That you should worry about.

Posted by WDRussell1

So in other words, no President (current or next election) supports your position. Perhaps they know things you don''t, or recognize the tradeoff between the realities of national security needs and the ideological fantasies of the left wing.
Reply to this comment
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