The court allowed the intelligence community to collect metadata
from phone companies, the Office of Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper said in a news release.
The release offered almost no details about the ruling, but a U.S.
official said the authority was renewed for three months, and that
it applied to the entire metadata collection program.
In the past, these orders were sometimes issued to individual
telephone companies. But the official said the latest order covered
all companies from which metadata had been collected under recent
previous court authorizations.
News the National Security Agency can track the telephone calls of
Americans by collecting metadata of who they contact and when, was
one of the main revelations by former spy agency contractor Edward
Snowden last year that set off public outcry about government
spying.
Two U.S. district judges recently issued conflicting rulings on the
legality and constitutionality of bulk metadata collection by the
NSA.
On Friday, the Justice Department filed notice it was appealing a
ruling in December by Washington-based federal judge Richard Leon
that declared bulk metadata collection was probably unlawful. Leon
said that he could not imagine a more "indiscriminate" and
"arbitrary" invasion of privacy.
But William Pauley, a federal judge based in Manhattan, issued a
ruling last month that found such collection legal.
Clapper's office said that U.S. intelligence agencies were "open to
modifications" to the metadata collection program that "would
provide additional privacy and civil liberty protections while still
maintaining its operational benefits."
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The NSA says it only uses the metadata of Americans in limited
circumstances and with great care.
A panel of outside experts appointed by President Barack Obama
recently questioned whether the results produced by bulk metadata
collection outweighed the intrusion into Americans' privacy. It
suggested possible changes in the program, but not its cancellation.
Obama is expected to produce his own recommendations for reforms or
changes in U.S. electronic surveillance later this month.
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Aruna Viswanatha;
editing by
Alistair Bell and Andre Grenon)
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