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Jeudi 29 novembre 2007

Administration de Bush forcée de retourner les Doc.s remarquants

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Administration de Bush forcée de retourner les documents remarquants par vendredi

Declan McCullagh

Un juge fédéral a commandé l'administration de Bush divulguer des documents liés aux compagnies de immunisation de télécommunications des procès, dire ils ont illégalement ouvert leurs réseaux à l'agence de sécurité nationale.

LES États-Unis Juge de zone Susan Illston à San Francisco a donné l'Office du directeur de l'intelligence nationale jusqu'au 30 novembre (vendredi) de retourner des documents concernant des conversations qu'il a eues avec des porteurs du congrès et de télécommunications au sujet de la façon récrire des lois d'écoute clandestine.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation had filed this case to seek faster processing of a Freedom of Information Act request it filed, which could help buttress its ongoing lawsuit against AT&T. There are approximately 250 pages of unclassified material and 65 pages of classified material, which would be redacted, that the administration has identified but said could not be turned over until December 31.

Note that Illston’s order doesn’t deal with the NSA’s wiretapping program itself (how it works, what companies are involved, whether there really is a secret room at AT&T’s 611 Folsom Street location). Instead the documents relate only to conversations and communications about retroactive immunity for companies like AT&T that are accused of violating the law.

Note also that if AT&T and other telecommunications companies followed the law, no retroactive immunity is necessary. Because AT&T and the Bush administration are supporting such a legal shield, you can draw your own conclusions about what’s really going on.

The Friday deadline means that the documents will likely be available in time to influence congressional debate over amending the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Some FISA amendments expire in February 2008, which means that Congress is likely to return to the topic soon.

The House of Representatives rejected retroactive immunity on November 16. The Senate Judiciary Committee seemed to like the idea of immunity, but the debate is expected to resume on the Senate floor next month.

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  • This entry was posted on Thursday, November 29th, 2007 at 1:00 am and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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