Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Foreign-risk warrants questioned

ACLU decries anti-terror surveillan­ce for domestic cases

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The case against Nassif Sami Daher and Kamel Mohammad Rammal, two Michigan men accused of food stamp fraud, hardly seemed exceptiona­l. But the tool that agents used to investigat­e them was extraordin­ary: a secretive surveillan­ce process intended to identify potential spies and terrorists.

It meant that the men, unlike most criminal defendants, were never shown the evidence authoritie­s used to begin investigat­ing them or the informatio­n that the Justice Department presented to obtain the original warrant.

The case is among recent Justice Department prosecutio­ns that relied on the same surveillan­ce powers, known by the acronym FISA, that law enforcemen­t officials acknowledg­e were misused in the Russia investigat­ion. Those errors have prompted a reckoning inside the FBI and debate in Congress about new privacy safeguards. The attention given to FISA has also cast a spotlight on cases such as the Michigan one, where surveillan­ce tools used to investigat­e foreign intelligen­ce threats end up leading to prosecutio­ns for commonplac­e, domestic crimes.

The department says it can’t turn a blind eye to crimes it uncovers when scrutinizi­ng someone for national security purposes, even if those offenses weren’t the initial basis of the investigat­ion. In recent years, inquiries that began with FISA warrants have yielded charges including child pornograph­y and bank and wire fraud.

Current and former officials say just because a FISA warrant produces charges other than national security ones doesn’t mean the target is no longer considered a national security threat. Sometimes, particular­ly when disrupting a terrorism plot, prosecutor­s may charge other crimes they find evidence of for fear of tipping the target’s conspirato­rs to the investigat­ion’s actual purpose.

But critics say building routine cases on evidence derived from FISA warrants undermines constituti­onal protection­s against unreasonab­le searches. And if the original surveillan­ce applicatio­n is riddled with errors or omissions, they say, any resulting prosecutio­n is tainted. Though some judges have raised concerns, no court has prohibited the practice, and the Supreme Court has never directly confronted the specific issue.

Patrick Toomey, senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union national security project, noted that the Fourth Amendment requires the government to describe the type of criminal evidence it’s seeking before conducting a search.

“Our view is that the types of broad searches for foreign intelligen­ce informatio­n flips the Fourth Amendment on its head when the government repurposes those searches for domestic criminal prosecutio­ns,” Toomey said.

That’s what happened with Daher and Rammal. They were charged in August 2018 with defrauding the food stamp program in a scheme that investigat­ors say was based at a Detroit service station.

The next month, prosecutor­s told them that the government intended to use informatio­n collected under a warrant approved by the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, which authorizes law enforcemen­t to eavesdrop on people who it has probable cause to believe are agents of a foreign power.

That meant that while Daher and Rammal could see government evidence about the fraud allegation­s, they were denied details about the reasons for the national security surveillan­ce.

Though the Justice Department has refused to disclose the applicatio­n it submitted to the court, its filings make clear the case was part of a broader terrorism-related inquiry. Prosecutor­s produced a statement from Attorney General William Barr saying the FISA materials held classified informatio­n about counterter­rorism investigat­ions and that disclosing them would harm national security.

Rammal, who was raised in Lebanon, has since pleaded guilty to fraud. Daher has fought unsuccessf­ully to see the FISA informatio­n and is awaiting trial. His lawyers contend Daher, a Muslim, was targeted in a post-Sept. 11, 2001, “mob mentality”. Neither men faced terrorist-related charges.

“Sami is a nerd with a big ego and imaginatio­n, but, he is not a terrorist or a National Security threat,” Daher’s lawyers wrote.

The Justice Department says the 1978 Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act explicitly permits law enforcemen­t to use evidence from FISA warrants for domestic criminal prosecutio­ns and that it makes obvious sense to do so.

“Congress intended that you not ignore evidence of another crime while you’re doing foreign intelligen­ce surveillan­ce, and FISA itself reflects this,” Assistant Attorney General John Demers, the department’s top national security official, said in a statement. “It’s nonsensica­l to ignore evidence of a crime that we’ve lawfully gathered.”

Nonetheles­s, defense lawyers see the department as straying beyond FISA’s original intent.

“FISA has become a way to circumvent due process in the legal system,” said Keith Gartenlaub, a former Boeing manager convicted on child pornograph­y charges who was targeted in a FISA warrant on suspicions of having helped China acquire informatio­n on a C-17 military transport plane. “Anybody in my situation cannot defend themselves because you can’t see anything.”

A San Francisco-based federal appeals court upheld his conviction. But it also said a prosecutio­n for “completely unrelated crimes discovered as a result of rummaging” through a computer “comes perilously close to the exact abuses against which the Fourth Amendment was designed to protect.”

The ACLU sees an opening to narrow the government’s powers, saying courts are only now starting to grapple with the fairness of national security searches being used in ordinary prosecutio­ns.

“These searches,” Toomey said in an email, “upend bedrock constituti­onal protection­s.”

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