U.S. lawmakers ask for disclosure of
number of Americans under surveillance
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[April 08, 2017]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. congressional
committee on Friday asked the Trump administration to disclose an
estimate of the number of Americans whose digital communications are
incidentally collected under foreign surveillance programs, according to
a letter seen by Reuters.
Such an estimate is "crucial as we contemplate reauthorization," of
parts of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that are due to
expire at the end of the year, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob
Goodlatte, a Republican, and John Conyers, the panel's top Democrat,
wrote in a letter addressed to Director of National Intelligence Dan
Coats.
The request comes as some Republican lawmakers, many of whom have
stridently defended U.S. surveillance programs in the past, express
sudden interest in considering additional privacy safeguards to how U.S.
spy agencies collect and share intelligence that contains information
about Americans.
That interest has been sparked by evolving, unsubstantiated assertions
that the Obama White House used surveillance powers to improperly spy on
the incoming Trump administration.
Privacy advocates have for years demanded that the U.S. government share
an estimate of how many Americans are ensnared by programs authorized
under a certain part of FISA, known as Section 702, that allows for the
collection of vast quantities of internet communications from foreigners
believed to be living overseas.
Some experts and lawmakers have said they believe data on millions of
Americans could be caught under such surveillance, exposing them to
warrantless searches by federal investigators.
"It is clear that Section 702 surveillance programs can and do collect
information about U.S. persons, on subjects unrelated to
counter-terrorism," wrote Goodlatte and Conyers, who requested a
response by April 24. "It is imperative that we understand the size of
this impact on U.S. persons as our committee proceeds with the debate on
reauthorization."
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A security camera hangs near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S.,
November 7, 2016. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
In a separate letter sent last December to the outgoing Obama
administration, members of the House Judiciary Committee said they
were given assurances by officials that an estimate would be
provided, likely by January of this year.
Richard Ledgett, the deputy director of the National Security
Agency, said "yes" when asked by a Reuters reporter last month
whether an estimate would be provided before year end. He also said
about 20 "vignettes" would be publicly released that show the
important national security value of Section 702, which officials
have described as among the most important intelligence tools at
their disposal.
Section 702 will expire on Dec. 31, 2017, absent congressional
action.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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