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Winehole23
05-22-2011, 01:17 PM
The always-expanding bipartisan Surveillance State (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/20/surveillance/index.html)

By Glenn Greenwald (http://www.salon.com/author/glenn_greenwald/index.html)


(updated below - Update II)

When I wrote earlier this week (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/16/whistleblowers/index.html) about Jane Mayer's New Yorker article (http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/23/110523fa_fact_mayer?currentPage=all) on the Obama administration's war on whistleblowers, the passage I hailed as "the single paragraph that best conveys the prime, enduring impact of the Obama presidency" included this observation from Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin: "We are witnessing the bipartisan normalization and legitimization of a national-surveillance state." There are three events -- all incredibly from the last 24 hours -- which not only prove how true that is, but vividly highlight how it functions and why it is so odious.



Continue reading (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/20/surveillance/index.html)


First, consider what Democrats and Republicans just jointly did with regard to the Patriot Act (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110519/ap_on_go_co/us_patriot_act), the very naming of which once sent progressives into spasms of vocal protest and which long served as the symbolic shorthand for Bush/Cheney post-9/11 radicalism:


Top congressional leaders agreed Thursday to a four-year extension of the anti-terrorist Patriot Act, the controversial law passed after the Sept. 11 attacks that governs the search for terrorists on American soil.


The deal between Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker John Boehner calls for a vote before May 27, when parts of the current act expire. The idea is to pass the extension with as little debate as possible to avoid a protracted and familiar argument over the expanded power the law gives to the government. . . .

From its inception, the law's increased surveillance powers have been criticized by liberals and conservatives alike as infringements on free speech rights and protections against unwarranted searches and seizures.


Some Patriot Act opponents suggest that Osama bin Laden's demise earlier this month should prompt Congress to reconsider the law, written when the terrorist leader was at the peak of his power. But the act's supporters warn that al-Qaida splinter groups, scattered from Pakistan to the United States and beyond, may try to retaliate.


"Now more than ever, we need access to the crucial authorities in the Patriot Act," Attorney General Eric Holder told the Senate Judiciary Committee.
This will be the second time that the Democratic Congress -- with the support of President Obama (http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2010/0301/Obama-signs-Patriot-Act-extension-without-reforms) (who once pretended to favor reforms (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leslie-harris/obama-versus-obama-on-the_b_315638.html)) -- has extended the Patriot Act without any changes. And note the rationale for why it was done in secret bipartisan meetings: to ensure "as little debate as possible" and "to avoid a protracted and familiar argument over the expanded power the law gives to the government." Indeed, we wouldn't want to have any messy, unpleasant democratic debates over "the expanded power the law gives to the government." Here we find yet again the central myth of our political culture: that there is too little bipartisanship when the truth is there is little in Washington but that (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2008/01/30/bipartisanship). And here we also find -- yet again (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/story/index.html?story=/opinion/greenwald/2011/05/02/bin_laden) -- that the killing of Osama bin Laden is being exploited to justify a continuation, rather than a reduction, in the powers of the National Security and Surveillance States.


Next we have a new proposal from the Obama White House to drastically expand the scope of "National Security Letters" (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/28/AR2010072806141.html) -- the once-controversial and long-abused (http://www.aclu.org/national-security/fbi-audit-exposes-widespread-abuse-patriot-act-powers) creation of the Patriot Act that allows the FBI to obtain private records about American citizens without the need for a subpoena or any court approval -- so that it now includes records of your Internet activities:


White House proposal would ease FBI access to records of Internet activity

The Obama administration is seeking to make it easier for the FBI to compel companies to turn over records of an individual's Internet activity without a court order if agents deem the information relevant to a terrorism or intelligence investigation.


The administration wants to add just four words -- "electronic communication transactional records" -- to a list of items that the law says the FBI may demand without a judge's approval. Government lawyers say this category of information includes the addresses to which an Internet user sends e-mail; the times and dates e-mail was sent and received; and possibly a user's browser history. . .


Stewart A. Baker, a former senior Bush administration Homeland Security official, said the proposed change would broaden the bureau's authority. "It'll be faster and easier to get the data," said Baker, who practices national security and surveillance law. "And for some Internet providers, it'll mean giving a lot more information to the FBI in response to an NSL." . . .
To critics, the move is another example of an administration retreating from campaign pledges to enhance civil liberties in relation to national security. The proposal is "incredibly bold, given the amount of electronic data the government is already getting," said Michelle Richardson, American Civil Liberties Union legislative counsel.


The critics say its effect would be to greatly expand the amount and type of personal data the government can obtain without a court order. "You're bringing a big category of data -- records reflecting who someone is communicating with in the digital world, Web browsing history and potentially location information -- outside of judicial review," said Michael Sussmann, a Justice Department lawyer under President Bill Clinton who now represents Internet and other firms.
So first they conspire with the GOP to extend the Patriot Act without any reforms, then seek to expand its most controversial and invasive provisions to obtain the Internet activities of American citizens without having to bother with a subpoena or judicial approval -- "they" being the Democratic White House.


Most critically, the government's increased ability to learn more and more about the private activities of its citizens is accompanied -- as always -- by an ever-increasing wall of secrecy it erects around its own actions. Thus, on the very same day that we have an extension of the Patriot Act and a proposal to increase the government's Internet snooping powers, we have this (http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/05/19/114478/justice-dept-is-pushed-to-release.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_term=news):


The Justice Department should publicly release its legal opinion that allows the FBI to obtain telephone records of international calls made from the U.S. without any formal legal process, a watchdog group asserts.


The nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation alleges in a lawsuit filed Thursday that the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel violated federal open-records laws by refusing to release the memo.

The suit was prompted in part by McClatchy's reporting that highlighted the existence of the memo and the department's refusal to release it. Earlier this year, McClatchy also requested a copy and was turned down.


The decision not to release the memo is noteworthy because the Obama administration -- in particular the Office of Legal Counsel -- has sought to portray itself as more open than the Bush administration was. By turning down the foundation's request for a copy, the department is ensuring that its legal arguments in support of the FBI's controversial and discredited efforts to obtain telephone records will be kept secret.
What's extraordinary about the Obama DOJ's refusal to release this document is that it does not reveal the eavesdropping activities of the Government but only its legal rationale for why it is ostensibly permitted to engage in those activities. The Bush DOJ's refusal to release its legal memos authorizing its surveillance and torture policies was unquestionably one of the acts that provoked the greatest outrage among Democratic lawyers and transparency advocates (see, for instance, Dawn Johnsen's scathing condemnation (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2009/04/16/olc_memos) of the Bush administration for its refusal to release OLC legal reasoning: "reliance on 'secret law' threatens the effective functioning of American democracy" and "the withholding from Congress and the public of legal interpretations by the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) upsets the system of checks and balances between the executive and legislative branches of government."


The way a republic is supposed to function is that there is transparency for those who wield public power and privacy for private citizens. The National Security State has reversed that dynamic completely, so that the Government (comprised of the consortium of public agencies and their private-sector "partners") knows virtually everything about what citizens do, but citizens know virtually nothing about what they do (which is why WikiLeaks specifically and whistleblowers generally, as one of the very few remaining instruments for subverting that wall of secrecy, are so threatening to them). Fortified by always-growing secrecy weapons, everything they do is secret -- including even the "laws" they secretly invent to authorize their actions -- while everything you do is open to inspection, surveillance and monitoring.



This dynamic threatens to entrench irreversible, absolute power for reasons that aren't difficult to understand. Knowledge is power, as the cliché teaches. When powerful factions can gather unlimited information about citizens, they can threaten, punish, and ultimately deter any meaningful form of dissent: J. Edgar Hoover infamously sought to drive Martin Luther King, Jr. to suicide by threatening to reveal King's alleged adultery discovered by illicit surveillance; as I described earlier today in my post on New York's new Attorney General (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/20/schneiderman/index.html), Eliot Spitzer was destroyed in the middle of challenging Wall Street as the result of a massive federal surveillance scheme that uncovered his prostitution activities. It is the rare person indeed with nothing to hide, and allowing the National Security State faction unfettered, unregulated intrusive power into the private affairs of citizens -- as we have been inexorably doing -- is to vest them with truly awesome, unlimited power.


Conversely, allowing government officials to shield their own conduct from transparency and (with the radical Bush/Obama version of the "State Secrets privilege" (http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/04/expert_consensus_obama_aping_bush_on_state_secrets .php?ref=fp1)) even judicial review ensures that National Security State officials (public and private) can do whatever they want without any detection and (therefore) without limit or accountability. That is what the Surveillance State, at its core, is designed to achieve: the destruction of privacy for individual citizens and an impenetrable wall of secrecy for those with unlimited surveillance power. And as these three events just from the last 24 hours demonstrate, this system -- with fully bipartisan support --- is expanding more rapidly than ever.

UPDATE: I confused the timing of the second incident I mentioned here: the White House's proposal to expand NSL's to include Internet records. That actually occurred last July. But I also neglected to include in this list the Obama White House's September demands (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/09/27/privacy) that all ISP's and manufacturers of electronic communication devices (such as Blackberries) provide "backdoors" for government surveillance, so that bolsters the points I made here.

UPDATE II: So patently illegal is Obama's war in Libya as of today (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/19/libya/index.html) that media reports are now coming quite close to saying so directly; see, for instance, this unusually clear CNN article today from Dana Bash (http://edition.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/05/20/war.powers/). As a result, reporters today bombarded the White House with questions about the war's legality, and here is what happened, as reported by ABC News' Jake Tapper (http://twitter.com/jaketapper/status/71664067344990208):


http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-WGBShCCopKc/TdbTtsjl2WI/AAAAAAAAAB8/E5B88jJPgjo/s400/tapper.png (http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-WGBShCCopKc/TdbTtsjl2WI/AAAAAAAAAB8/E5B88jJPgjo/s1600/tapper.png)
Talk about "secret law." You're not even allowed to know the White House's rationale (if it exists) for why this war is legal. It simply decrees that it is, and you'll have to comfort yourself with that. That's how confident they are in their power to operate behind their wall of secrecy: they don't even bother any longer with a pretense of the most minimal transparency.

http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/05/20/surveillance/index.html

Winehole23
05-22-2011, 01:20 PM
A few of the changes to the Patriot Act WC might have been pointing at mutely in another thread (http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=179991), are referenced above.

ElNono
05-22-2011, 02:00 PM
Thanks for posting. Truly sad state of things. As much as you hear about insurmountable debt being what's going to bury this country, this is probably what's going to destroy it first.

Wild Cobra
05-22-2011, 02:27 PM
A few of the changes to the Patriot Act WC might have been pointing at mutely in another thread (http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=179991), are referenced above.
Yes, this was one of the items I am concerned with:

White House proposal would ease FBI access to records of Internet activity (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/28/AR2010072806141.html)

Did you also know that the use of the patriot act tools has dramatically increased since Obama took office?

Democrats, Republicans agree to four-year extension of Patriot Act powers (http://www.opednews.com/articles/2/Democrats-Republicans-agr-by-Patrick-Martin-110522-402.html)


In 2009, the FBI issued 14,788 NSLs on 6,114 individuals. In 2010 this figure doubled, with the bureau issuing 24,287 NSLs on 14,212 individuals. Wiretapping applications rose from 1,376 in 2009 to 1,579 in 2010.

Requests known as 215 orders, named after the provision now to be extended another four years, rose even more sharply. The FBI made 21 applications for 215 orders in 2009, then more than quadrupled its use of this procedure last year, making 96 applications.

Fact or fiction.... you decide:

Wonderful things happen when the president starts a white house web site to turn in patriotic Americans...

Like said before, I trust the people who have access to the tools less than the tools them self.

LnGrrrR
05-22-2011, 02:33 PM
Obamas 180 on civil liberties is the only thing making me look at other candidates.

LnGrrrR
05-22-2011, 02:34 PM
WC, you should have known that the power would be expanded and abused from the first moment the Patriot Act was passed. That's what govt does best, right?

ElNono
05-22-2011, 02:35 PM
Yes, this was one of the items I am concerned with:

White House proposal would ease FBI access to records of Internet activity (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/28/AR2010072806141.html)

You said you were concerned with changes that were done since the Obama administration took hold. We're still waiting for what those changes were.
But you're lazy when you want to be, this being one of those cases.


Did you also know that the use of the patriot act tools has dramatically increased since Obama took office?

Democrats, Republicans agree to four-year extension of Patriot Act powers (http://www.opednews.com/articles/2/Democrats-Republicans-agr-by-Patrick-Martin-110522-402.html)

Not surprised.


Fact or fiction.... you decide:

Wonderful things happen when the president starts a white house web site to turn in patriotic Americans...

Like said before, I trust the people who have access to the tools less than the tools them self.

Except you never said such thing. You championed the Patriot Act during the previous administration under the guise of fighting terrerists. But when the administration changes, and now it gets extended for 4 more years under the same guise with bipartisan support, you're up in arms, and "I don't like republicans either". I don't particularly disagree with your current position on the issue, but this predates this administration, and that you think it doesn't says a lot more about you than it does about the issue itself.

Wild Cobra
05-22-2011, 02:51 PM
You said you were concerned with changes that were done since the Obama administration took hold. We're still waiting for what those changes were.
But you're lazy when you want to be, this being one of those cases.



Not surprised.



Except you never said such thing. You championed the Patriot Act during the previous administration under the guise of fighting terrerists. But when the administration changes, and now it gets extended for 4 more years under the same guise with bipartisan support, you're up in arms, and "I don't like republicans either". I don't particularly disagree with your current position on the issue, but this predates this administration, and that you think it doesn't says a lot more about you than it does about the issue itself.

I made two points. I didn't like the changes and I don't trust the people holding the tools.

Now as I think about it, I don't think what linked was ever implemented.

I'm OK with the original intent and use of the Patriot Act. If it hasn't changed, I'm still OK with that vehicle. Just not the driver.

My God...

These people had a web site asking Americans to turn in other Americans.

The last time that occurred was during the Red Scare!

ElNono
05-22-2011, 03:15 PM
I made two points. I didn't like the changes and I don't trust the people holding the tools.

You still haven't pointed out what those changes were (hint: which is going to be difficult, since there were no changes on the law in the current administration so far, IIRC).


Now as I think about it, I don't think what linked was ever implemented.

Nope. It's still a proposal.


I'm OK with the original intent and use of the Patriot Act. If it hasn't changed, I'm still OK with that vehicle. Just not the driver.

I guess we can infer from that is your admission to being a partisan cheerleader. Which is really not a new or surprising development. It's unfortunate though, seeing that what's wrong is never the driver, but the capabilities of the vehicle. We all know the driver is going to push as hard as the vehicle allows, regardless of party.


My God...

I'm not your god.


These people had a web site asking Americans to turn in other Americans.
The last time that occurred was during the Red Scare!

What does that has to do with the Patriot Act? And FWIW, the 1-800 number for turning in other Americans on terrerist suspicions predate this administration also. But you probably conveniently forgot about that.

Wild Cobra
05-22-2011, 03:22 PM
WC, you should have known that the power would be expanded and abused from the first moment the Patriot Act was passed. That's what govt does best, right?
I agree, and if you were to go back to the first Patriot Act threads I participated in here, I'll bet I voiced similar concerns. I know I voiced the concerns of worrying about who has access to the tools.

ChumpDumper
05-22-2011, 03:24 PM
Why does this partisan hack think the "tools" are any better in the hands of Republicans?

ElNono
05-22-2011, 03:25 PM
I agree, and if you were to go back to the first Patriot Act threads I participated in here, I'll bet I voiced similar concerns. I know I voiced the concerns of worrying about who has access to the tools.

I'm pretty sure I can pull up threads were you were not worried about the 'tools' being misused, and put tremendous faith that they were not going to be misused.

Wouldn't be the first time you forget what you post.

ElNono
05-22-2011, 03:27 PM
As a matter of fact, the excuse was that the intelligence community claimed that needed them, and you were more than happy to side with them. That they knew stuff we didn't.
I'm not sure how that's not the case now, and why you suddenly know more about the stuff we don't know.

Wild Cobra
05-22-2011, 04:31 PM
I'm pretty sure I can pull up threads were you were not worried about the 'tools' being misused...
I'm sure you can since I'm sure I didn't reiterate it in every post. You will find I did say it at some point in the past.

ElNono
05-22-2011, 05:40 PM
I'm sure you can since I'm sure I didn't reiterate it in every post. You will find I did say it one some point in the past.

:rollin

Capt Bringdown
05-22-2011, 08:40 PM
Jane Mayer is an excellent writer on the subject, her book The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals (http://www.amazon.com/Dark-Side-Inside-Terror-American/dp/0307456293/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1306114677&sr=8-1) should be required reading. And thank goodness for the Greenwald.

Winehole23
07-28-2012, 12:04 PM
http://hlpronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Smith.pdf

boutons_deux
07-28-2012, 12:59 PM
OBL is up there with 72 virgins laughing his ass of on how he suckered Americans into "foreign wars" and to declare war Americans, violating their every last shred of privacy.

Winehole23
07-29-2012, 03:00 AM
we did it to ourselves. giving the credit to OBL is a copout.

Winehole23
09-18-2012, 12:28 PM
while the Obama administration's war on whistleblowers who reveal fraud, waste and official crimes continues, high officials continue to leak with impunity, mainly for dim witted political reasons.


Marcy pointed out even before it aired (http://www.emptywheel.net/2012/01/28/leon-panetta-and-the-pakistani-doctor-yet-more-double-standards-on-classified-information/) that Defense Secretary (and former CIA Director) Leon Panetta’s televised confirmation that Dr. Shakeel Afridi worked for the CIA in the effort to find and kill Osama bin Laden was a breech of security. Since then, both Marcy (http://www.emptywheel.net/2012/05/23/flaunting-shakeel-afridis-cia-ties-appears-not-to-have-worked-all-that-well/) and I (http://www.emptywheel.net/2012/07/17/more-damage-from-panettas-vaccine-ruse-un-doctor-on-polio-vaccine-drive-shot-hundreds-of-thousands-denied-polio-vaccine/) have documented the damage resulting from this disclosure, which includes Afridi being jailed instead of quietly slipping out of Pakistan and a UN doctor being shot while hundreds of thousands of Pakistani children have been denied vaccines. In further damage from Panetta’s improper disclosure, Pakistan is now in the process of expelling the aid group Save the Children (http://news.yahoo.com/pakistan-government-expels-save-children-staff-alleged-ties-211125791.html) over concerns that they may have a CIA tie through a link with Afridi.


But that is not the only time Panetta has disclosed secret information that he should have kept quiet. In this post (http://www.emptywheel.net/2012/08/23/signs-of-intelligence-sharing-give-way-to-call-for-divorce-us-pakistan-relations-continue-extreme-swings/) where I was discussing what looked like signs of increasing cooperation between the US and Pakistan, I included video from an AP interview of Panetta. The segment I chose to post turns out to be very significant. Here is my description of the video clip and its significance:
The absence of drone strikes continued and then on August 13 Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was interviewed (http://news.yahoo.com/panetta-pakistan-military-plans-open-front-211622732.html) by Lolita Baldor and Robert Burns of AP. As seen in the video excerpt above, Panetta said that he expected Pakistan to launch military operations soon against Taliban militants in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. As Bill Roggio noted at Long War Journal (http://www.longwarjournal.org/threat-matrix/archives/2012/08/pakistan_will_launch_operation.php), this was a shocking development. After opening with “This is absolutely stunning”, Roggio went on to list his reasoning for why the announcement didn’t make much sense.
Panetta’s claim that Pakistan was about to launch military action in the FATA stunned those who watch the area closely. By publicly announcing such an unexpected action before it started, Panetta put Pakistan into an untenable position. Today’s Express Tribune details the damage arising from Panetta’s disclosure (http://tribune.com.pk/story/437832/north-waziristan-operation-to-stay-under-wraps/):
Pakistan has quietly conveyed to the United States to not make any public statement on its planned operation against militants in the restive North Waziristan Agency bordering Afghanistan.


The advice stems from the fact that any remarks by American officials may complicate the Pakistani authorities’ plan to create the ‘necessary environment’ for the Waziristan offensive, a senior government official said.


Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the official told The Express Tribune that the military does not want to be seen as aligned with the US on the issue of launching a fresh operation in the rugged tribal belt because of growing anti-American sentiments in the country.
Pakistan protested directly to the US about Panetta’s leak:
Islamabad voiced concerns when US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta disclosed last month that the Pakistani military was planning to start an operation against militants in North Waziristan.
/snip/


“It was inappropriate for Panetta to make that statement. There was no need for that … it really complicated the situation,” a military official commented.
Why does Leaky Leon still hold a security clearance? The Haqqani network, operating now with virtual impunity from Pakistan’s FATA, is seen as one of the largest barriers to a stable Afghanistan. By delaying Pakistan’s action against them, Panetta has made himself directly responsible for additional harm to NATO troops and innocent Afghan civilians who happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
http://www.emptywheel.net/2012/09/17/leaky-leon-does-more-damage/

boutons_deux
09-18-2012, 12:57 PM
I heard Panetta on NPR this morning. VERY unimpressive, and stupid sounding.

Winehole23
09-18-2012, 01:48 PM
Diane Roark Talks NSA Retribution


by Kelley B. Vlahos (http://original.antiwar.com/author/vlahos/), September 18, 2012
[/URL]


Here in this space we’ve written a great deal about dedicated public servants who, in varying post-9/11 roles in the national security state, became disillusioned when they discovered corruption or outright illegalities in the system. They found blank stares, closed doors — even hostility — when approaching the proper channels for help. The critical decision to do something despite the lack of institutional support sets them apart from the day-jobbers as true defenders of the Constitution they swore to uphold, the ethics and values they believed the U.S government stood for.



Of course, their lives were changed their lives forever, some, paying very dearly, as a result.



So, we’ve written about [URL="http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/04/02/the-passion-of-bradley-manning/"]Bradley Manning (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/09/17/diane-roark-talks-nsa-retribution/print/), Peter Van Buren (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2011/10/03/whos-afraid-of-peter-van-burens-book/), Karen Kwiatkowski (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/06/04/karen-kwiatkowskis-primary-mission/), Anthony Shaffer (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2011/01/13/lt-col-shaffer-vs-the-pentagon/), Jon Kiriakou (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/01/30/kiriakou-ivins/) and Tom Drake (http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/01/03/dark-days-for-govt-whistleblowers/). We’ve talked with Jesselyn Radack (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesselyn_Radack) and Col. Morris Davis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Davis), who both raised red flags about detainee testimony elicited through torture, the former losing her job with the Justice Department, the latter leaving a his post as top Gitmo prosecutor and early retirement.
Are you ready for one more?
Recently, Diane Roark (http://www.wweek.com/portland/article-19632-who%27s_listening_to_diane_roark.html) has been in the newspapers. Simply put, she wants her desktop computer, and is suing the federal government to get it back. How she came to this point — a 63-year-old mother, breast cancer survivor and avid gardener living in Oregon — fighting The Man to get her stuff, is a twisted story that reads like a thriller but seems to be all too familiar in the new “you’re either with us or against us” reality.



Remember when The New York Times story (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/16/politics/16program.html?pagewanted=all) by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau about the feds’ warrantless wireless wiretapping broke in December 2005? It was huge (if it hadn’t been held by the NYT for a year it might have been big enough to affect President Bush’s Nov. 2004 re-election bid). But for Roark, then a 17-year veteran legislative aide on the House Intelligence Committee, it was already old news. According to her own timeline, she found out about the warrantless surveillance of American citizens from her sources at the National Security Agency (NSA) as early as February 2002. These well-cultivated sources included William Binney, a career analyst who in a stunning new “op-doc” by filmmaker Laura Poitras’ (http://www.nytimes.com/video/2012/08/22/opinion/100000001733041/the-program.html) is called “one of the best mathematicians and code-breakers in NSA history.”



In 2002, Binney had just resigned a 32-year career at the NSA in disgust. In interviews since, he’s explained that a surveillance program that he had helped to develop, called “ThinThread (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThinThread),” had been bastardized by the NSA after the 9/11 attacks. It became known as “Trailblazer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trailblazer_Project)” and most importantly, it was built without the privacy controls of ThinThread. After 2001, according to Binney, it was deployed to monitor all online data communications including emails and cell phones without regard to domestic constitutional (mainly Fourth Amendment) protections. No one knew how many Americans were affected, but after repeated attempts to complain internally, he retired, along with J. Kirk Wiebe and Ed Loomis, two other longtime NSA employees who could not brook what they said was an enormous breach of the U.S Constitution — spying on American citizens without warrant.



Binney, along with Tom Drake, who was then working as an executive at the NSA, and the others, began talking to Roark, who started knocking on doors and writing letters to colleagues on Capitol Hill about their concerns. In an in-depth piece about Drake by Jane Mayer of The New Yorker (http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/23/110523fa_fact_mayer?currentPage=all) in 2011, Roark is described as “a registered Republican, skeptical about bureaucracy but strong on national defense.”



“I went to a lot of people and that’s the reason they targeted me,” Roark told Antiwar in an interview last week. “I went to the committee, to the Democratic staff and to the Republican staff directors and talked to them, I wrote memos to (then) Chairman Porter Goss and ranking member Nancy Pelosi …. I wrote them many, many memos.”



When it was clear she was getting nowhere, she went to folks who were “cleared” security-wise within the system — the Associate Director of National Intelligence and the FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) Court (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FISA_court), which is supposed to handle the warrants for secret spying. She said she went to David Addington, naively so, because as it turns out, the former counsel to Vice President Dick Cheney was the key drafter of the administration’s clandestine domestic surveillance program (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/13/AR2008091302284_pf.html), and a powerful legal hand behind the expansion of the president’s unitary executive powers.



“I was pretty depressed about the whole thing,” Roark said. Calls and memos went unreturned and unanswered. She decided to retire in late 2002 after 17 years with the committee. “I felt I had done as much as I could have done in the process.”
Before leaving she did sent a plea to talk about Trailblazer to Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, believing at some point the warrantless surveillance would come before the high court. But again, silence.



“I knew it was going to leak,” she said. “Everyone I talked to agreed it would eventually leak because it appeared to be so illegal it was inevitable that someone would leak it.”
Roark and her associates — Wiebe, Loomis and Binney — continued to go through proper channels, filing a secret complaint about the waste, fraud and abuse of Trailblazer with the Pentagon’s Inspector General. The resulting 2005 IG report is classified, but it is supposed to be scathing, according to Drake, who back-channeled assistance on the original complaint.



The IG report might have helped hasten the end of Trailblazer, though not the end of domestic surveillance at the NSA, despite the heat on the White House from Congress over the NYT expose in 2005. Roark and her friends insist they were not the leakers in that NYT article, but as agitators from the beginning, they were instant targets.
“In August 2006, I was contacted and told the FBI wanted to know if I would cooperate in the wiretaps issue. My first thought was at last they were finally investigating the illegalities! I thought, it’s about time. But then I found out it was about the leak investigation. I had no inkling I was a target, it just didn’t occur to me,” Roark said.



In February 2007, Roark and her attorney were contacted and met with agents “and then it became evident I was a target.” They didn’t hear anything for months and then on July 26, 2007, the goon squad showed up on her doorstep. “By the time I woke up and got my bathrobe on and went downstairs, they were about to break down the door. I saw some guys in suits outside. I said, ‘who are you?’ and they said ‘FBI.’ I said, ‘what do you want?’ They flashed their badges and said, ‘let us inside and we’ll tell you what we want.’”



Unbeknownst to Roark at the time, agents were simultaneously raiding the homes of her fellow whistleblowers, Binney, Wiebe and Loomis. Binney has since told reporters he was in the shower at the time. “They went right upstairs to the bathroom and held guns on me and my wife, right between the eyes,” he told Mayer for her 2011 story.



Roark believes she was also the target of a “sneak and peek (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneak_and_peek_warrant)” raid, allowed under counter-terror provisions in the Patriot Act. This means that at some point before the July search and seizure, federal agents had entered when she was not at home and poked around at their leisure. “They knew exactly where to go,” and what papers to take, she recalled on the day of the raid.



Roark, Binney, Wiebe and Loomis were never charged with anything but as of the raids, were stripped of their security clearances, which, like any professional who loses a license or accreditation, effectively means they cannot work competitively in the national security field, including private consulting.



Drake was raided in November 2007. He lost his security clearance and job and despite cooperating, was charged under the 1917 Espionage Act for having classified documents on his computer. He was also charged with obstruction and lying to federal agents about deleting files on his computer and giving classified information about ThinThread and Trailblazer to the Baltimore Sun.


The case crumbled a year later. (http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2011-06-09/news/bs-md-nsa-leak-case-20110609_1_jesselyn-radack-charge-in-leak-case-espionage-act) All 10 felonies (including the espionage charges) against him were dropped and he pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor for exceeding authorized use of his government computer. But again, his government career is effectively over.



Some time after the raid on Roark, the FBI asked her to plead guilty to a charge of perjury. She called their bluff — she had never perjured herself. In fact, Roark charged, they had deliberately taken her comments in the earlier interview out of context. She said no. She never heard back from the FBI or anyone in the federal government again.



“It makes me feel pretty disgusted to tell you the truth,” Roark said. She was “dropped like a hot potato” by her old friends on the committee. As for the FBI intimidation, “what it appears to be is just plain retribution,” for the IG complaint. “They never had a shred of evidence … there was nothing, absolutely nothing for them to go on.”
Drake, in an email exchange with Antiwar, said Roark and the others had lost much, but managed to maintain their integrity and their convictions throughout those dark days after 9/11.



“(Roark’s) unwavering commitment to the Constitution and the rule of law is an incredible testimony to her courage and integrity as she stood up against an unbridled and unaccountable national security state bent on subverting the Constitution for its own overreaching and unwarranted ends in secret, when there was never any reason to do so,” he wrote.
Roark, Drake and Binney still contend that the collection of domestic personal data is widespread and goes on unabated, as exemplified in The Washington Post’s “National Security Inc,” (http://projects.washingtonpost.com/top-secret-america/articles/national-security-inc/) and more recently, James Bamford’s chilling Wired report last March about NSA’s newest data storage facility in Utah (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/) (which the NSA has denied (http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/21/nsa-chief-denies-allegations-of-big-brother-machine-in-utah/)). In July, Binney took the stage at the DefCon (http://projects.washingtonpost.com/top-secret-america/articles/national-security-inc/) hacker conference and challenged NSA Director Gen. Keith Alexander’s claims that the agency does not maintain files on Americans. He dramatically describes the current NSA program Stellar Wind (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_Wind_%28code_name%29), a Trailblazer legacy, in the aforementioned Poitras documentary.



More recently, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) sued the government over its refusal to divulge information about its violations of the 2008 FISA Act (http://www.pcworld.com/article/261681/eff_lawsuit_seeks_details_of_nsa_email_phone_surve illance.html). Such information would indicate the extent to which the government continues to secretly monitor Americans without warrant. This apparent obstruction has caused Sen. Ron Wyden, R-Wyo., to put a hold on the Senate’s vote (http://www.wyden.senate.gov/news/press-releases/wyden-places-hold-on-fisa-amendments-act-extension) to reauthorize the FISA Act (which expires in December). The House just passed its own measure (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/09/fight-over-fisa-amendments-act-moves-senate-house-passes-broad-warrantless-spying) to extend the act on Sept. 13.



“It is very frightening,” said Roark, who is now suing the government to get her computer and other property taken in the 2007 raid, returned.



“I am very worried about our future — like Bill (Binney) said, it is ‘turnkey totalitarianism’ — you collect all this information, and you can go after anybody you want. Looking at the way they concocted this false case against us. It doesn’t have to mean you’ve done anything wrong, you just have to do something they don’t like.”
http://original.antiwar.com/vlahos/2012/09/17/diane-roark-talks-nsa-retribution/

Winehole23
04-27-2018, 02:03 AM
APPROVAL RATES FOR COMBINED ORDERS, 2017 VERSUS 2016https://www.emptywheel.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Screenshot-2018-04-25-at-6.08.21-PM.png (https://www.emptywheel.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Screenshot-2018-04-25-at-6.08.21-PM.png)

https://www.emptywheel.net/2018/04/25/the-fisa-court-rejected-far-more-applications-last-year/

Winehole23
02-13-2019, 12:03 PM
f
or those of you who care about your civil liberties, a new form of police digital information collection, known as a “reverse location search warrant” have been approved by courts in Maine, Minnesota, North Carolina and Virginia, even though the ACLU contends that these search warrants violate the Fourth Amendment by not being sufficiently specific.


A “reverse location search warrant” is when the police seek information on all cell phones that have been near a crime scene. As we’ll discuss in more detail belwo concerns that these are data fishing expeditions appear valid when you look at how unnecessarily broad these search warrants have been, not only extending as much as a day before and after the incident, but also encompassing a large area. For instance, a story in MPR News (hat tip Chuck L) showed the extent of the search area relative to the crime location (https://www.mprnews.org/story/2019/02/07/google-location-police-search-warrants):
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Screen-Shot-2019-02-12-at-2.16.41-AM.png

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2019/02/reverse-location-search-warrant-a-new-personal-data-hoovering-exercise-brought-to-you-by-google.html

Winehole23
02-14-2019, 11:39 AM
:wow

1014989486432882689

Winehole23
02-14-2019, 11:48 AM
A reporter unearths the true history of the internet: it was built by the government to spy on citizens, at home and abroad.

In Surveillance Valley, Yasha Levine traces the history of the internet back to its beginnings as a Vietnam-era tool for spying on guerrilla fighters and antiwar protesters–a military computer networking project that ultimately envisioned the creation of a global system of surveillance and prediction. Levine shows how the same military objectives that drove the development of early internet technology are still at the heart of Silicon Valley today. Spies, counterinsurgency campaigns, hippie entrepreneurs, privacy apps funded by the CIA.

https://surveillancevalley.com/

hater
02-14-2019, 11:54 AM
Just dont carry a cellphone everywhere tbqh. Its been done for thousands of years

Also always use TOR and encryption. Sure they can still get you if you have become a “person of interest” but basically hide in the crowd.

In the end just treat any digital screen or public place as being under 100% surveillance by the state or corporations. Kinda like in 1984 :lmao

Winehole23
02-14-2019, 12:07 PM
TOR was developed by DARPA to secure intelligence comms, but whatever.

hater
02-14-2019, 03:05 PM
TOR was developed by DARPA to secure intelligence comms, but whatever.

It was developed by Naval Research Labs tbqh

It was developed to be anonymous in the web which it really does as wikileaks, hackers, snowden all use it.

Sure the givernment funding is suspect in the project but all my research suggests its legit and government supports it because they use it as a tool themselves