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"We are reviewing it," Department of Justice spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said. In June, Judge Walker tossed out more than three dozen lawsuits against the nation's telecommunications companies for allegedly taking part in the program. Congress in 2008 agreed on new surveillance rules that included protection from legal liability for telecommunications companies that allegedly helped the U.S. spy on Americans without warrants. Walker previously upheld the constitutionality of the new surveillance rules. His ruling is being appealed. Anthony Coppolino, the U.S. Department of Justice lawyer who has been in charge of the Islamic Foundation case under both administrations, has never addressed the legality of the wiretap program. Coppolino has always argued the case should be tossed out in the name of national security and said the government risked exposing ongoing intelligence work if the lawsuit were allowed to proceed. The government argued that its "state secret privilege" trumped the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, known as FISA, which requires investigators to seek wiretap approval from a special court that convenes behind closed doors. Coppolino refused to even discuss whether such a secret warrant existed, arguing that to confirm or deny would threaten national security. On Wednesday, the judge said the government was wrong and ruled that it should be assumed investigators lacked a warrant. "FISA takes precedence over the state secrets privilege in this case," Walker wrote. The Bush administration invoked the secrets privilege numerous times in lawsuits over various post-9/11 programs. In another wiretap case targeting the Bush tactics, the Center for Constitutional Rights asked the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday to order government officials to disclose if officials eavesdropped without warrants on electronic conversations between 23 attorneys and their clients held at Guantanamo. Lower courts had tossed out that request.
[Associated
Press;
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