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Judge rules against Bush in spying lawsuit
- Poor WD
43 awe
Administration argues defending case
threatens to reveal state secrets
U.S. District Judge Vaughn
Walker said the warrantless eavesdropping has been so
widely reported that there appears to be no danger of spilling secrets. Dozens of lawsuits alleging
that telecommunications companies and the government are illegally intercepting
Americans communications without warrants have been filed. This is the first
time a judge has ruled on the governments claim of a state secrets
privilege. It might appear that none
of the subject matter in this litigation could be considered a secret given
that the alleged surveillance programs have been so widely reported in the
media, Walker said. Dismissing
this case ... would sacrifice liberty
The compromise between
liberty and security remains a difficult one, And in declining to dismiss
AT&T Inc. from the lawsuit, filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation
privacy group, The Justice Department did
not immediately return calls seeking comment. The lawsuit challenges
President Bushs assertion that he can use his wartime powers to eavesdrop on
Americans without a warrant. It accuses AT&T of illegally cooperating with
the National Security Agency to make communications on AT&T networks
available to the spy Of the highest
order The government argued that
divulging any information about any alleged collusion between AT&T and the
government to eavesdrop on Americans could subject AT&T employees and
facilities to attack and would enable terrorists to communicate more
securely. The state secrets defense,
first recognized by the U.S. Supreme Court in a McCarthy-era lawsuit, has been
increasingly and successfully invoked by federal lawyers seeking to shield the
government from court scrutiny. BUT NOT THIS TIME -
Judson Witham |
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Modified Tuesday, January 18, 2011 Copyright @ 2007 by Fathers' Manifesto & Christian Party |