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NY Times article falsely suggested authority to eavesdrop on terrorism suspects expires on Feb. 1

January 29, 2008 4:03 pm ET

SUMMARY: A New York Times article falsely suggested that the legal authority "permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects" would expire on February 1 unless Congress renews it. In fact, neither the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act -- the principal law "permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects" -- nor the authority to monitor the communications of suspected terrorists will "expire" on February 1; rather, what are set to expire are the August 2007 revisions to FISA made through the Protect America Act.

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In a January 29 article about President Bush's State of the Union speech, New York Times writer Sheryl Gay Stolberg falsely suggested that the legal authority "permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects" would expire on February 1 unless Congress renews it. Stolberg reported that Bush "implored" Congress "to renew legislation permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects" and that "the existing eavesdropping law ... is set to expire on Friday [February 1]." In fact, neither the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) -- the principal law "permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects" -- nor the authority to monitor the communications of suspected terrorists will "expire" on February 1, as Media Matters for America has noted. Rather, what are set to expire are the August 2007 revisions to FISA made through the Protect America Act (PAA), which, among other things, expanded the government's powers to eavesdrop on Americans' domestic-to-foreign communications without a warrant. Before Congress amended FISA in August 2007, the government had the authority to listen in on the communications of suspected terrorists if, under most circumstances, it obtained a court order to eavesdrop on communications either intercepted in the United States or acquired by intentionally targeting the communications of a particular, known U.S. person who is in the United States.

According to the PAA's "transition procedures," after those revisions expire on February 1, all new authorizations for surveillance would be governed by the FISA statute as it existed prior to the PAA revisions, while all current authorizations would remain in effect until their scheduled expiration date.

Similarly, a January 29 Washington Post editorial about the State of the Union speech stated that Bush "threatened to veto the temporary extension of a law authorizing surveillance of telephone calls and e-mails" without noting that, even without the extension, such surveillance would still be authorized.

From Stolberg's January 29 New York Times article headlined "Bush, Facing Woes in '08, Focuses on War and Taxes":

Looking ahead, on domestic affairs, Mr. Bush called on Congress to reauthorize his signature education bill, No Child Left Behind, and to pass pending trade agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea. He asked lawmakers to make his tax cuts permanent, and implored them to renew legislation permitting intelligence officials to eavesdrop on the communications of terrorism suspects and to provide legal immunity to phone companies that have helped in the wiretapping efforts.

Yet even as Mr. Bush issued that call, lawmakers were at an impasse over the bill Monday night, as the Senate rejected two measures that would have forced votes on competing proposals -- a plan backed by the White House and a short-term effort by Democrats to extend by a month the existing eavesdropping law, which is set to expire on Friday.

From the January 29 Washington Post editorial titled "Final State":

It's possible that the economic relief will be the only significant legislative achievement this year. Mr. Bush urged Congress to show "that Republicans and Democrats can compete for votes and cooperate for results at the same time." But it was hardly a sign of comity that he threatened to veto the temporary extension of a law authorizing surveillance of telephone calls and e-mails that the administration itself sought originally.

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    • Author by johnny_nyc8351 (January 29, 2008 4:11 pm ET)
         
      Well, we are living in a world where adding 10,000 more troops in Iraq is a "drawdown" and letting temporary tax cuts expire is a "raising taxes."
      Report Abuse
      • Author by anotheramerican (January 29, 2008 4:27 pm ET)
           

        Johnny,

        I don't know where you heard or read of the 'drawdown', but every time they raise my taxes, I don't care what they call it, in my mind it is a tax increase.  If you like, please explain to me why you think this isn't the case. 

        Thanks, 

        Report Abuse
        • Author by johnny_nyc8351 (January 29, 2008 6:09 pm ET)
             
          Somebody gave a speech last night and spent a couple of paragraphs on the "drawdown". His middle initial is W or something. Maybe there's something about it on the internet.

          Also,

          When DirectTv has a package they charge $49 for but are willing to let you pay $29 for a year if you sign up within a specified time limit when you start paying the full $49 a year from now have they raised the price?

          I don't think so.

          It's the same with the temporary tax cuts.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by tex (January 29, 2008 4:17 pm ET)
         

      Such surveillance has ALWAYS been legal, provided you get a WARRANT.

      To get a warrant, however, takes the hard work of building a case, collecting evidence, and getting a minimal of Probable Cause. This kind of work is inconvenient to tyrants, so historically, tyrants have dispensed with such formalities as PROTECTING THE RIGHTS OF INDIVIDUALS, and following Constitutional mandates.

      A Police State can unarguably provide a population with more "security" from outside dangers. Unfortunately, it also necessarily deprives that population of liberty, freedom, and individual rights. Citizens become subjects, the self-ruled become subjugated.

      Some people are so frightened, so scared and so in need of such "protection", that they gladly forfeit their individual rights. By so doing, though, they eliminate the only thing it is important to PROTECT. Such a state becomes no better than any force that might "threaten" it.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (January 29, 2008 4:49 pm ET)
           
        Brilliantly stated, Tex. Unfortunately, if you try to explain such nebulous and lofty concepts to the Knuckledragging 30-percenters, their eyes glaze over. They just don't get it... they'll never get it.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by nerzog (January 29, 2008 4:57 pm ET)
         
      Slightly off topic....but President Numbnuts just issued yet another signing statement, nullifying a law which "bars funding for permanent bases in Iraq and for any action that exercises U.S. control over Iraq’s oil money."

      Why are we not impeaching this clown?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by eweston8542983 (January 29, 2008 5:47 pm ET)
         
      Cause if we do the tearrorusts will murder us all in our beds, or while we're under our beds.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Don Hussein Fabuloso (January 30, 2008 11:08 am ET)
           
        Precisely, Eweston. And then the Taxocrats will take all of our money that George Bush wants to "trust" us with to "empower" us.Some people just don't get it.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by historygeek001 (January 30, 2008 3:26 pm ET)
         

      Remember FISA?  It still exists.  They can still get 72 hour retroactive permission to spy on somebody.  The arguments they used to justify domestic spying were specious from the start, and arguments to continue such spying are ludicrous. 

      Maybe Bush, who has claimed that "they hate us for our freedom" thinks that if he takes away our freedoms and our rights that they won't hate us anymore.

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