Privacy, Free Speech on the Line as Court Considers FBI's Warrantless Surveillance Program

A federal appeals court on Wednesday began hearings into whether the government can spy on U.S. citizens without a warrant, reviewing a landmark case from 2013 that found a National Security Letters (NSL) statute of the Patriot Act—the FBI’s tool for unchecked surveillance demands—to be unconstitutional.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit heard testimony from both digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Justice Department about the suppression-of-speech orders that accompany NSLs to prohibit telecommunications companies, like Internet Service Providers (ISPs), from discussing FBI demands for private customer data. A Justice Department lawyer expressed concern that national security efforts could be “hamstrung” if the Bureau was banned from secretly demanding information about U.S. citizens from their banks and phone companies and ordering them to stay quiet about it.

The court is likely to continue hearings for the next few months, EFF legal fellow Andrew Crocker told Common Dreams.

“This is in large part a free speech case,” Crocker said. “It has pretty important implications for the free speech rights of service providers… being able to engage in debate about NSLs and other national security processes.”

Over 100,000 NSLs have been issued since their power and usage soared after the Patriot Act was passed into law, allowing the FBI to demand, at will and without warrants, that phone companies and ISPs turn over private data about their customers’ communications and internet activity. The letters are also used to obtain information about citizens’ credit and banking history.

The EFF challenged one such gag order issued to an unidentified internet organization in 2011 after it received an NSL from the FBI, which claimed the data demand was related to a terrorism investigation. In a decision the EFF called “remarkable,” U.S. District Judge Susan Illston struck down the NSL statute in 2013 when the case reached the lower court, ruling that the gag order violated the First Amendment and that the government could not justify prohibiting the company from disclosing the contents of the NSL.

“The government has failed to show that the letters and the blanket non-disclosure policy serve the compelling need of national security,” and the suppression of information creates “too large a danger that speech is being unnecessarily restricted,” Illston wrote at the time of her 2013 decision.

As Freedom of the Press executive director and former EFF activist Trevor Timm explained, “the case was so consequential that the judge put a hold on enforcing her ruling until the Court of Appeals could rule on the contentious issue first.”

Illston gave the government 90 days to appeal.

Wednesday’s proceeding, though it is just the first in what will be a series of similar hearings, “shows the court’s willingness to take on these kinds of cases,” Crocker said.

Alan Butler, senior counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), told Common Dreams that NSLs and the FBI’s “other surveillance authorities frustrates the public oversight to curb abuses of these authorities.”

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