U.S. appeals court upholds gag orders on
FBI data surveillance
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[July 18, 2017]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. federal
appeals court on Monday upheld nondisclosure rules that allow the FBI to
secretly issue surveillance orders for customer data to communications
firms, a ruling that dealt a blow to privacy advocates.
A unanimous three-judge panel on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
in San Francisco sided with a lower court decision in finding that rules
permitting the Federal Bureau of Investigation to send national security
letters under gag orders are appropriate and do not violate the First
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution's free speech protections.
Content distribution firm Cloudflare and phone network operator CREDO
Mobile had sued the government in order to notify customers of five
national security letters, or NSLs, received between 2011 and 2013.
The FBI's use of NSLs has drawn increased scrutiny as new transparency
laws have let companies publish some of the letters, which has shown the
agency may have run afoul of rules restricting their use.
Andrew Crocker, an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
which represented the companies in the consolidated case, said no
immediate decision whether to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court had been
made. He called the ruling disappointing.
The Justice Department declined comment.
Several major technology firms, including Microsoft and Twitter, have
mounted a variety of legal challenges in recent years to U.S. government
restrictions limiting what they can disclose, both to affected users and
to the public, about the surveillance requests they receive.
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A man types on a computer keyboard in front of the displayed cyber
code in this illustration picture taken on March 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
National security letters are a type of government subpoena for
communications data sent to service providers. They are usually
issued with a gag order, meaning the target is often unaware that
records are being accessed, and they do not require a warrant.
Tens of thousands of NSLs are issued annually, and some gag orders
last indefinitely.
Writing for the panel, Judge Sandra Ikuta said the gag orders meet a
compelling U.S. government interest, are sufficiently narrow and
allow for appropriate judicial review.
Ikuta, appointed by former Republican President George W. Bush, said
recent changes to the law passed by Congress in 2015 bolstered
oversight of NSL use.
In June of last year the U.S. Senate narrowly rejected a
Republican-backed proposal to expand the kinds of telephone and
internet records the FBI could request under an NSL to include
senders and recipients of emails, some information about websites a
person visits and social media log-in data.
The legislation failed, but lawmakers have said they intend to
pursue the expansion again.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by David Gregorio and Andrew Hay)
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