Campaign for Liberty joins collation against new pro-surveillance bills
Campaign for Liberty has joined a collection of organizations in sending a letter to the Senate opposing the FISA Improvements Act of 2015 and the the FISA Reform Act of 2015. These pieces of legislation are being promoting by surveillance state boosters Senator Richard Burr (R-SC) and Senator Diane Feinstien (D-CA).
Burr and Feinstien claim there bills “reform” the government’s surveillance programs, but in fact these bills are even weaker than the House-passed USA Freedom Act.
With only two days to go before the Senate resumes debate on extending the sunseting Patriot Act provisions, Campaign for Liberty is ramping up or efforts to block the surveillance state. Please support our efforts by signing your “I Object!” Citizen’s Objection to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and please contribute to our Stop the Surveillance State Round Two Banner Bomb.
Text of letter here and below.
The Honorable Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader
The Honorable Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader
Dear Majority Leader McConnell and Minority Leader Reid:
We the undersigned companies, industry and trade groups, and civil society organizations write in opposition to the drafted FISA Improvements Act of 2015 and the FISA Reform Act of 2015, proposals that fail to properly address overbroad surveillance activities, and would weaken privacy, civil liberties, and the digital economy.
Both bills contain flaws and omissions that are incompatible with the goal of stopping domestic bulk collection. The bills require that collection be based on “specific selection terms” but define these terms so broadly as to raise serious concern as to whether they would significantly curtail the government’s ability to collect large amounts of information of individuals with no nexus to terrorism. Furthermore, the bills do not require any public disclosure of critical Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court rulings that contain novel or significant interpretations of law. This would result in the establishment of even more secret law as the new requirements under these bills would be interpreted in classified settings, and surveillance programs implemented thereunder may again contravene to Congressional intent and public wishes.
Further, both bills authorize the government to impose a data retention mandate on private businesses, a privacy-threatening measure that is unnecessary and unacceptable. As confirmed by the Director of National Intelligence and Attorney General this month, existing retention practices meet government needs, and do not raise security concerns. A retention mandate would only serve to hinder innovation, decrease trust in communication and technology products and services, and raise significant information security concerns.
Finally, the FISA Improvements Act would permit domestic bulk collection by leaving unchanged the FISA Pen Register/Trap and Trace law, which was used for years to collect Internet metadata in bulk. The bill explicitly leaves Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act unchanged for two years, despite recent public assurances by the NSA Director that a transition period longer than 180 days is not necessary. In addition to this, the bill contains provisions that weaken whistleblower protections, expand surveillance power by granting the FBI the authority to obtain electronic communication transaction records without a court order, and make permanent provisions of the PATRIOT Act that are currently tied to a sunset date.
Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act is set to expire at 12:00 am on June 1. No legislation has passed the Senate, despite a clear demand for surveillance reform. These proposals are unviable, ineffective, and do not offer a path forward. We strongly urge against consideration of the FISA Improvements Act or the FISA Restoration and Reform Act.
Sincerely,
Access
Advocacy for Principled Action in Government
American Association of Law Libraries
American Booksellers for Free Expression
America Civil Liberties Union
American Library Association
Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee
Association of Research Libraries
Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Brennan Center for Justice
Campaign for Liberty
Center for Democracy & Technology
Computer & Communications Industry Association
The Constitution Project
Constitutional Alliance
Council on Islamic American Relations
CREDO
Cyber Privacy Project
Data Foundry, Inc.
Defending Dissent Foundation
Demand Progress
DownsizeDC.org
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Free Press Action Fund
Fight for the Future
FreedomWorks
Golden Frog, GmbH
Government Accountability Project
Gun Owners of America
Human Rights Watch
i2Coalition
Internet Archive
Media Alliance
Liberty Coalition
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
National Coalition Against Censorship
New America’s Open Technology Institute
The Niskanen Center
OpenMedia
OpenTheGovernment.org
Participatory Politics Foundation
Project on Government Oversight
R Street
Republican Liberty Caucus
Restore the Fourth
RootsAction.org
ServInt
Silent Circle
Sunlight Foundation
TechFreedom
Venture Politics
Draft available at https://cdt.org/files/2015/05/Burr-FISA-Improvements-Act-2015-Draft.pdf.
Draft available at https://cdt.org/files/2015/05/Feinstein-FISA-Reform-Act-Draft.pdf.
See, Letter from Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and Attorney General Loretta Lynch to Senators Leahy and Lee (May 11, 2015), available at https://cdt.org/files/2015/05/DNI-AG-USA-FREEDOM-2015-Support-Letter.pdf.
See, Letter from NSA Director Adm. Michael Rogers to Senate Leadership (May 20, 2015), available at https://josephhall.org/misc/Section-215-Transition-Letter-20May15.pdf.
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