[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 106 (Wednesday, June 21, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H4999]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNAUTHORIZED SPYING ON AMERICANS AND 702 REAUTHORIZATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, once again, Americans' privacy is
under attack, this time by the spying eyes of our own U.S. Government.
And people across the U.S. are wondering what is this section 702
issue.
Well, Mr. Speaker, section 702 is a provision of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act. We call it FISA. It permits government
to monitor the communications of suspected foreign agents, including
terrorists, and to find out, in that communication, if that foreign
agent wants to hurt us.
However, sometimes these individuals under surveillance communicate
with American citizens, and this surveillance allows the conversations
of ordinary citizens to be recorded, and that includes text messages,
emails, and the conversation itself.
But what many Americans don't realize is these secret communications
are not destroyed by the intelligence agencies. They are kept and kept
forever. In fact, the government stores this data, and often goes back
into that data and searches it, without a warrant, in violation of the
Fourth Amendment of the Constitution, for information on American
citizens.
What we do with the foreign agents, hey, it is okay. But government
then takes that information they have seized on Americans and then goes
back and looks through it without a real warrant. That includes the
IRS, the FBI. And they get the NSA to give those conversations on
Americans, unrelated to the conversation with the terrorist, and they
use that information to maybe prosecute them for some unrelated offense
years later. Usually, this subsequent search is for reasons wholly
unrelated to the original collection.
Essentially, the government uses this procedure to spy on Americans
who may have done no wrong, and the search is not based on probable
cause, not based on a real warrant from a real judge.
The National Security Agency is designed to keep a close watch on
terrorists and foreign agents, not Americans. NSA surveillance is
supposed to keep us safe from those foreign agents who wish to do us
harm.
But before the Federal Government decides to invade the privacy of
Americans, they should obtain a real warrant. Under current law, FISA
courts, those are secret courts that operate in secret and issue secret
warrants--I have got a whole issue problem with secret courts in this
country anyway, based upon the history of the Star Chamber in England.
However, those secret courts allow government to search and collect
that data, and the FISA courts almost always grant the requested
warrant on the foreign agent.
Our Founders feared that a government powerful enough to commit
unreasonable searches and seizures on Americans should be closely
watched. That is why they crafted the Fourth Amendment, to protect our
right to privacy. As a former judge, I heard issues on the Fourth
Amendment every day. And let me read it again, especially for those
folks in NSA.
``The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses,
papers, effects''--that would be conversations--``against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall
issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and
particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or
things to be seized.''
That applies to the NSA. If they can get a warrant from a real judge
based on probable cause to search that data on Americans, go for it.
But they can't. They just seize the information and peruse it later and
get information on Americans and then prosecute them.
This kind of reverse targeting on Americans is not what Congress
intended under 702 of the FISA authorization bill. Technology may
change, but our Constitution never changes, and spying on Americans
just has to stop.
Americans should not be forced to sacrifice liberty and
constitutional rights for security, especially for overreaching Federal
bureaucrats.
Regardless of the result surrounding the alleged incidental capture
of campaign officials' conversations, the American public must realize
the implications of this little provision called 702. Reverse targeting
of Americans without a search warrant based on the Fourth Amendment has
got to stop. Can't do it.
But right now Congress has the ability to reform overreaching law as
part of the larger FISA reauthorization process that will take place
this year.
Opponents of 702, the concept that you can't spy on Americans, are
wishing for what they call a pure reauthorization of FISA, without any
new safeguards. They argue that these mass invasions of privacy will
make us safer.
Those who preach we must sacrifice the Constitution on the altar of
false security are wrong. We must never abdicate our rights because the
national spy agency, NSA, demands it.
In fact, even a FISA court judge found that NSA analysts had been
collecting searches that violate the procedures under FISA ``with much
greater frequency than had previously been disclosed to the court''.
The FISA court called this a very serious Fourth Amendment issue.
Well, no kidding. It is a violation of current law, but the NSA
violates current law and spies on Americans.
After these findings were released and NSA was caught, the NSA
pledged to stop the warrantless surveillance of Americans. But, Mr.
Speaker, their promise is useless.
FISA and 702 must be fixed by inserting the specific language that
prohibits reverse targeting on Americans without a valid search
warrant. If government wants information on Americans, get a warrant.
Without clear and specific language, our intelligence agencies will
continue these unconstitutional searches, even if they promise to end
their procedure.
But we can't trust the NSA not to spy on Americans, so Congress needs
to have an open debate on the spying of Americans and not reauthorize
the FISA procedure unless we make sure that the American right of
privacy is protected. Congressional action must be taken on this issue.
It is time to end spying on Americans. If you want to spy on an
American, get a real warrant from the Fourth Amendment. Continue that
surveillance of foreign nationals. That is a different issue. But you
can't do both. You must protect the American right of privacy.
Congress has that obligation because that is our job to enforce the
Fourth Amendment right of privacy.
And that is just the way it is.
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