[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 202 (Tuesday, December 12, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H9795-H9796]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, it reads like a page out of George
Orwell's ``1984:'' spies, secret courts, and searches of Americans
without a warrant. It is clear: Big Brother is watching us.
Most Americans may not be fully aware of what is taking place behind
closed doors of government spy agencies, but the reality is our
government is spying on ordinary, everyday Americans.
How?
Through an old piece of legislation, originally signed into law by
President Carter in 1978, called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act, or FISA.
FISA allows our government to spy on foreign agents, including
terrorists, primarily overseas. The government collects all of this
information and puts it into a database. If they want to use or search
the database, they go to a secret court, and that court issues a secret
warrant to search the database.
This court operates behind closed doors and issues those secret
warrants to go after--remember--bad guys overseas.
As the subcommittee chairman of terrorism, I have no problem with our
government going after terrorists who seek to harm Americans.
What I do have a problem with, Mr. Speaker, is the government uses
these databases that they seize and then looks in those databases about
Americans and their activities, violating their Fourth Amendment rights
because they don't have a warrant to go into these databases to look
for Americans. Remember, they are searching for terrorists.
Here is what happens: While seizing the communications of a suspected
foreign agent--maybe an al-Qaida terrorist talking to another al-Qaida
terrorist--the government, incidentally, picks up communications of
American citizens. These communications may not have anything to do
with terrorism.
This data is kept. The government puts it in their database, and they
say it is legal. This information on Americans was seized based on this
secret warrant of foreigners issued by a FISA judge.
Occasionally, the government then decides to go into this database
that was inadvertently seized--as they call it--without a Fourth
Amendment warrant on Americans, and checks to see how many times an
American name, or other identifying information, comes up. If they find
something, they use this data on the American citizen.
Now, Mr. Speaker, they still don't have a warrant to search
Americans' information, even if it was incidentally collected.
They search this database to see, for example, if Bobby Oglethorpe is
committing a crime in the United States, maybe having nothing to do
with terrorism. Maybe it is a robbery, maybe it is an IRS fraud, maybe
it violates other laws of the United States. But, remember, they are
looking for that without a warrant.
They seize the information, and, quite frankly, we don't know how
many times they seize this information on Americans.
Our Judiciary Committee has continually asked the intelligence
community: How many times have you searched? They refuse to tell us how
many searches and seizures there are on Americans in that database.
Very suspicious, isn't it, Mr. Speaker?
According to The Washington Post, 90 percent of the account holders,
whose communications were collected, were not targets. The bad guys
overseas, they were Americans: 90 percent of them.
Nearly half of the surveillance files contained names, email
addresses, and other details that the NSA marked as belonging to
American citizens or residents.
So, what information are they getting?
They get communications, texts, and emails.
Without a warrant, remember, secret courts issuing secret warrants,
and they don't tell anybody about it.
[[Page H9796]]
Under section 702 of the FISA legislation, this warrantless search of
Americans is legal. But this, in my opinion, violates the U.S.
Constitution.
As a former judge, I am very concerned about the loss of our Fourth
Amendment right of privacy in the United States, based on this
unconstitutional law. The Fourth Amendment is sacred to this country
and to the Founders who drafted it. It is up to Congress to uphold
Americans' Fourth Amendment rights.
Despite intense debate in the House Judiciary Committee, I am still
concerned the House leadership is planning to reintroduce and
reauthorize the FISA legislation and not have these reforms to protect
Americans' privacy. A reauthorization of FISA with weak language only
seeks to put Americans' privacy at stake and violates the U.S.
Constitution.
Any 702 reauthorization should simply require that if you want to
look at the data that was incidentally seized on Americans, get a
search warrant or stay out of that data; otherwise, it violates the
Constitution.
And that is just the way it is.
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