yet another Memo…

Posted on Wednesday 2 April 2008


Memo justified warrantless surveillance
Secret Memo That Justified Warrantless Domestic Surveillance Comes to Light

For at least 16 months after the Sept. 11 terror attacks in 2001, the Bush administration believed that the Constitution’s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures on U.S. soil didn’t apply to its efforts to protect against terrorism. That view was expressed in a secret Justice Department legal memo dated Oct. 23, 2001. The administration on Wednesday stressed that it now disavows that view.

The October 2001 memo was written at the request of the White House by John Yoo, then the deputy assistant attorney general, and addressed to Alberto Gonzales, the White House counsel at the time. The administration had asked the department for an opinion on the legality of potential responses to terrorist activity. The 37-page memo is classified and has not been released. Its existence was disclosed Tuesday in a footnote of a separate secret memo, dated March 14, 2003, released by the Pentagon in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union.

"Our office recently concluded that the Fourth Amendment had no application to domestic military operations," the footnote states, referring to a document titled "Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activities Within the United States." Exactly what domestic military action was covered by the October memo is unclear. But federal documents indicate that the memo relates to the National Security Agency’s Terrorist Surveillance Program, or TSP.

That program intercepted phone calls and e-mails on U.S. soil, bypassing the normal legal requirement that such eavesdropping be authorized by a secret federal court. The program began after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and continued until Jan. 17, 2007, when the White House resumed seeking surveillance warrants from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court…
This story apparently has no bottom. A footnote is pointing to yet another John Yoo Memo, this time  justifying the N.S.A. unwarranted domestic surveillance program. 
  1.  
    joyhollywood
    April 3, 2008 | 8:27 AM
     

    Two of the people you have been writing about are two of my least favorite people.(except maybe Bush, Cheney, Bolton, William Bennett, Addington) I hope that John Yoo gets what is coming to him, maybe a demonstration on himself of what is allowed during interrogations that he wrote about) and loses his law license for the damage he has done to our country by twisting the laws of the land anyway Cheney wants them shaped.

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