Internet group sues US govt for electronic eavesdropping

by Sanjay Jha | September 18, 2008 at 11:15 pm
158 views | 4 Recommendations | 1 comment

George Bush has been spying emails and other electronic data to check on the war on terror. But now an american non profit organisation Electronic Frontier Foundation has filed a lawsuit against President George W. Bush and other senior members of his administration for illegaly putting a surveillance of emails and telephone calls which was conducted without any permission from the courts. They claim in this lawsuit that the Bush administration conducted “illegal surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans.” The same group had earlier filed a lawsuit against AT&T in 2006 related to similar programs. 

non-profit Internet rights group filed a lawsuit against the George W Bush administration for what it called the "massively illegal" surveillance of Americans' emails and telephone calls without court-issued warrants.

The suit was filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which took the administration to task for what it argued is "illegal surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans."

EFF Lawyers filed a suit against AT&T in 2006 charging the US telecom giant of opening its network to National Security Agency (NSA) agents without proper warrants to scour communications.

In the summer, Congress passed legislation granting US telecommunications firms’ immunity from domestic spying lawsuits.

Wrangling about the constitutionality of that act has stalled the AT&T lawsuit as well as a slew of similar litigation aimed at other telecommunications firms.

EFF lawyers said on Thursday that the new lawsuit is aim squarely at government officials, thereby sidestepping the immunity act.

"Our goal in this new case against the government, as in our case against AT&T, is to dismantle this dragnet surveillance program as soon as possible," said EFF senior staff attorney Kevin Bankston.

"For years, the NSA has been engaged in a massive and massively illegal fishing expedition through AT&T's domestic networks and databases of customer records."

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Erik Larson
Erik Larson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 23:35 on September 18th, 2008

Sanjay Jha, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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