The National Security Agency (NSA) illegally intercepted thousands of
e-mails from Americans with no connection to terrorism and misled the
court about the scope of what it was doing, according to latest
declassified documents.
Officials disclosed the history of that unlawful surveillance, releasing
three partially redacted opinions of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court that detailed the judges’ concerns about how the NSA
had been siphoning data from the Internet in an effort to collect
foreign intelligence.
The documents were released in response to a Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an advocacy group
based in San Francisco.
According to a redacted 85-page opinion by the chief judge of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the National Security Agency
(NSA) may have been collecting as many as 56,000 “wholly domestic”
communications each year.
“For the first time, the government has now advised the court that the
volume and nature of the information it has been collecting is
fundamentally different from what the court had been led to believe,”
John D. Bates, the then surveillance court’s chief judge wrote in his
October 3, 2011 opinion.
U.S. intelligence officials sought to portray the matter as a technical glitch that the intelligence agencies caught and fixed.
But in the court opinion, judges said the NSA repeatedly had misled them about the scope of what it was doing.
“The court is troubled that the government’s revelations regarding NSA’s
acquisition of Internet transactions mark the third instance in less
than three years in which the government has disclosed a substantial
misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major collection programme,”
Mr. Bates wrote.
The latest revelations come amid growing criticism from members of
Congress and privacy groups about the NSA surveillance programs and
charges that the agency has far overstepped its bounds in collecting
information on U.S. citizens.
In a late night statement, the Office of the Director of National
Intelligence (ODNI) strongly refuted media reports that the U.S. has
unfettered access to some 75 per cent of the country’s online
communication.
“The reports leave readers with the impression that NSA is sifting
through as much as 75 per cent of the United States’ online
communications, which is simply not true. In its foreign intelligence
mission, and using all its authorities, NSA “touches” about 1.6 per
cent, and analysts only look at 0.00004 per cent, of the world’s
Internet traffic,” ODNI said.
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