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21st Century Wire says…

The infection in America’s judicial system continues, as judges work to ‘customize’ Americans’ rights – all in the name of ‘National Security’.

The latest in a long line of corrupt anti-American judges who seek to rule against the US Constitution and Bill of Rights…

The shame United States federal government under both George W. Bush and Barack Obama rolls on, and with the help of a string of willing unconstitutional federal judges, it has successfully implementing its new culture of paranoia – including secret courts, secret police, torture, rendition, lying to congress, and a war on whistleblowers. The ineptitude of the Department of Justice, also with a lack of constitutional backbone by judges have transferred an an unprecedented level of invasive power over to unaccountable back-budget agencies like the NSA and the DHS.

U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III (photo, left), ‘ruled’ that the domestic collection program is legal.

The Washington Post reports this morning that Pauley’s action came after “a Dec. 16 ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon that granted a request for an injunction and blocked the collection of the phone data for conservative legal activist Larry Klayman and a co-plaintiff.and rejected a challenge brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed an appeal Thursday.”

Watch Klayman in a recent MSNBC segment where ultra-liberal host Don Lemon cut off his mic in order to keep Klayman’s efforts from reaching an American audience…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjvgSShiMlo

By contrast, pro-American Judge Leon described the NSA’s digital Stasi as “almost-Orwellian technology” allowing federal thugs to collect, store and analyze phone metadata is “unlike anything that could have been conceived in 1979” and is “at best, the stuff of science fiction,” Leon wrote.

Judge Pauley’s attack against America’s Bill of Rights came after another deadly blow to the Fourth Amendment earlier in the week by fellow anti-American US District Judge Edward Korman from New York who ruled that US border officials do not need any reasonable suspicion to search a person’s personal items or electronic devices – within 100 miles of a US border.

According the ACLU’s Catherine Crump, “We’re disappointed in (Korman’s) decision, which allows the government to conduct intrusive searches of Americans’ laptops and other electronics at the border without any suspicion that those devices contain evidence of wrongdoing.”

“Suspicionless searches of devices containing vast amounts of personal information cannot meet the standard set by the Fourth Amendment… Unfortunately, these searches are part of a broader pattern of aggressive government surveillance that collects information on too many innocent people, under lax standards, and without adequate oversight.”

Read more from the Washington Post here:

Ruling against NSA collection of phone data is appealed

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Sari Horwitz

Washington Post



The Justice Department on Friday appealed the ruling of a federal judge who said the National Security Agency’s massive collection of domestic telephone data was almost certainly unconstitutional.

The Justice Department’s filing to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit follows a Dec. 16 ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon that granted a request for an injunction and blocked the collection of the phone data for conservative legal activist Larry Klayman and a co-plaintiff.

Leon, who was nominated by President George W. Bush and appointed to the bench in 2002, stayed his decision to allow the Justice Department time to appeal. But in a strongly worded opinion, he rejected the government’s arguments that the program is legal.

The “almost-Orwellian technology” that allows the government to collect, store and analyze phone metadata is “unlike anything that could have been conceived in 1979” and is “at best, the stuff of science fiction,” Leon wrote.

In 1979, the Supreme Court ruled that Americans have no reasonable expectation of privacy in records of their calls that are held by phone companies, and the court said that a warrant to collect them is not required.

In a separate case, less than two weeks after Leon’s ruling, a federal judge in New York found just the opposite. U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III ruled that the domestic collection program was legal and rejected a challenge brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed an appeal Thursday.

If the constitutionality of the NSA program divides the federal appeals courts, it is likely the Supreme Court will decide the issue.

Along with its appeal, the Obama administration on Friday revealed that the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court renewed an order allowing the NSA’s domestic phone record collection.

In a statement, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) said that Leon’s ruling was the “lone contrary decision” and cited several rulings that sided with the administration, including the Dec. 27 ruling by Pauley.

“It is the administration’s view, consistent with the recent holdings of the United States District Courts for the Southern District of New York and Southern District of California, as well as the findings of 15 judges of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court on 36 separate occasions over the past seven years, that the telephony metadata collection program is lawful,” the ODNI statement said.

READ MORE ON ILLEGAL NSA SPYING AT: 21st Century Wire NSA File