
Dec 17, 2007 7:33 pm US/Pacific
Senators Clash Over Surveillance Bill
Senate Delays Vote On Bill That Could Grant Immunity To Telecoms Eavesdropping On Potential Terrorists
WASHINGTON (AP) ―
The Senate late Monday delayed its consideration of a vote on a new government eavesdropping bill until January.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid delayed the bill because there
were more than a dozen amendments planned, and not enough time left on
the legislative calendar to manage them.
"Everyone feels it would be to the best interests of the Senate
that we take a look at this when we come back after the first of the
year," said Reid, D-Nev.
"With more than a dozen amendments to this complex and
controversial bill, this legislation deserves time for thorough
discussion on the floor," he said.
The new surveillance bill is meant to replace a temporary
eavesdropping law Congress hastily passed in August. That law, which
expanded the government's authority to listen in on American
communications without court permission, expires Feb. 1.
Senators clashed Monday in hours of debate over whether the
government's need to eavesdrop on potential terrorists outweighs
Americans' expectations that their private communications are
protected.
The Senate was grappling with how to update the 1978 Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, the law that dictates when federal
agents must obtain court permission before tapping phone and computer
lines inside the United States to gather intelligence on foreign
threats. Agents may tap lines without court permission outside the
country.
The most contentious question is whether telecommunications
companies that helped the government tap American communications after
the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks should be granted immunity from
lawsuits stemming from their actions. The surveillance was done without
permission from the secret court created 30 years ago to protect
Americans from unwarranted government intrusions on their privacy.
Senate leaders hoped to decide this week whether to shield
the telecommunications companies from the roughly 40 pending civil
lawsuits alleging violations of communications and wiretapping laws.
The White House says if the cases go forward they could reveal
information that would compromise national security. If they succeed,
the companies could be bankrupted.
The companies were helping the Bush administration carry out the
so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program, a still classified effort
that intercepted communications on U.S. soil without oversight from the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court from Sept. 11 to January 17,
2007.
"For the last six years, our largest telecom companies have been
spying on their own American customers," said Sen. Christopher Dodd,
D-Conn.
"This program is one of the worst abuses of executive power in our
nation's history," said Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis. "It's time for
congress to state, when we pass a law we mean what we said," Feingold
said.
Sen. John Warner, R-Va., said he believes the TSP was legal and
"essential to prevent further terrorist attacks against our homeland."
The companies helped out of concern for the country's security after
the terrorist attacks, he said.
The White House threatened Monday to veto any bill that does not
contain a retroactive immunity provision. The Senate Intelligence
Committee's version of the bill provides it; a competing version from
the Judiciary Committee does not.
The House recently approved a surveillance bill that does not provide retroactive immunity.
Multiple efforts were under way Monday to craft alternative
immunity provisions. Among the potential amendments is one by Sen.
Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who wants the U.S. government to stand in for
telecommunications companies as the defendant in the cases. The Senate
Judiciary Committee rejected putting such a provision in its version of
the bill.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., also introduced an immunity
amendment that would leave it to the 15 judges on the FISA court to
decide whether the companies merit protection from lawsuits. The court,
which was not consulted on the electronic surveillance at the center of
the debate, would determine whether the government's written requests
to the telecommunications companies were legal. If not, it would
determine whether the telecommunications companies believed they were
complying with a good-faith request from the government.
The White House issued a statement Monday night protesting the Feinstein amendment.
"Adding a review by the FISA court to the existing certification
process in the Intelligence Committee bill is not acceptable," said
White House spokesman Tony Fratto. "Imposing such a procedure is
unnecessary and fraught with risks."
The White House wants a permanent rewrite of FISA, contending that
changes in telecommunications technology have made the law an obstacle
to intelligence gathering. FISA requires the government to obtain court
approval before conducting electronic surveillance on U.S. soil, even
if the target is a foreign citizen in a foreign country.
However, many purely international communications are now routed through fiber-optic cables and computers in the United States.
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