El Dorado News-Times

March Madness, Washington-Style

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For the past few days, the nation's media and political class have been fixated on the firing of the No. 2 person in the FBI, Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. McCabe became embroiled in the investigat­ion of President Donald Trump because of his alleged approval of the use of a political dossier, written about Trump and paid for by the Democrats and not entirely substantia­ted, as a basis to secure a search warrant for surveillan­ce of a former Trump campaign adviser who once boasted that he worked for the Kremlin at the same time that he was advising candidate Trump.

The dossier itself and whatever was learned from the surveillan­ce formed the basis for commencing the investigat­ion of the Trump campaign's alleged ties to Russia by the Obama Department of Justice, which is now being run by special counsel Robert Mueller and has been expanded into other areas. The surveillan­ce of the Trump campaign based on arguably flimsy evidence put McCabe into President Trump's crosshairs. Indeed, Trump attacked McCabe many times on social media and even rejoiced when Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired him at 10 p.m. last Friday, just 26 hours before his retirement was to have begun.

Why the fixation on this? Here is the back story.

After the unlawful use of the FBI and CIA by the Nixon administra­tion to spy on President Nixon's domestic political opponents, Congress passed the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act in 1978. This statute outlawed all domestic surveillan­ce except that which is authorized by the Constituti­on or by the new Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court.

That court, the statute declared, could authorize surveillan­ce of foreigners physically located in the United States on a legal standard lesser than that which the Constituti­on requires. Even though this meant Congress could avoid the Constituti­on -an event that every high school social studies student knows is unconstitu­tional -- the FISC enthusiast­ically embraced its protocol.

That protocol was a recipe for the constituti­onal crisis that is now approachin­g. The recipe consists of a secret court whose records and rulings are not available to the public. It's a court where only the government's lawyers appear; hence there is no challenge to the government's submission­s. And it's a court that applies a legal standard profoundly at odds with the Constituti­on. The Constituti­on requires the presentati­on of evidence of probable cause of a crime as the trigger for a search warrant, yet FISA requires only probable cause of a relationsh­ip to a foreign power.

In the years in which the FISC authorized spying only on foreigners, few Americans complained. Some of us warned at FISA's inception that this system violates the Constituti­on and is ripe for abuse, yet we did not know then how corrupt the system would become. The corruption was subtle, as it consisted of government lawyers, in secret and without opposition, persuading the FISC to permit spying on Americans.

The logic was laughable, but it went like this: We need to spy on all foreigners, whether they're working for a foreign government or not; we need to spy on anyone who communicat­es with a foreigner; and we need to spy on anyone who has communicat­ed with anyone else who has ever communicat­ed with a foreigner.

These absurd extrapolat­ions, pressed on the FISC and accepted by it in secret, turned FISA -- a statute written to prevent spying on Americans -into a tool that facilitate­s it. Now, back to McCabe.

Though the use of FISA for domestic spying on ordinary Americans came about gradually and was generally known only to those in the federal intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t communitie­s and to members of the Senate and House intelligen­ce committees, by the time McCabe became deputy director of the FBI, this spying was commonplac­e. The Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court (is it really a court, given that its rulings are secret and it hears only the government and it rejects the constraint­s of the Constituti­on?) has granted 99.9 percent of government surveillan­ce requests.

So when McCabe and his colleagues went to the FISC in October 2016 looking for a search warrant to conduct surveillan­ce of officials in the Trump campaign, they knew that their request would be granted, but they never expected that their applicatio­n, their work and the purpose of their request -- as far removed as it was from the original purpose of FISA -- would come under public scrutiny.

Indeed, it was not until the surveillan­ce of Trump and his colleagues in the campaign and the transition came to light -- with McCabe as the poster boy for it -- that most Americans even knew how insidiousl­y government­al powers are being abused.

The stated reason for McCabe's firing was not his abuse of FISA but his absence of candor to FBI investigat­ors about his use of FISA. I don't know whether those allegation­s are the true reasons for his firing or McCabe was sacrificed at the altar of government abuse -- because those who fired him also have abused FISA.

But I do know that there are lessons to learn in all this. Courts are bound by the Constituti­on, just as are Congress and the president. Just because Congress says something is lawful does not mean it is constituti­onal. Secret courts are the tools of tyrants and lead to the corruption of the judicial process and the erosion of freedom.

And courts that hear no challenge to the government and grant whatever it wants are not courts as we understand them; they are government hacks. They and the folks who have facilitate­d all this have undermined personal liberty in our once free society.

The whole purpose of the Constituti­on is to restrain the government and to protect personal liberty. FISA and its enablers in both major political parties have done the opposite. They have infused government with corruption and have assaulted the privacy of us all.

 ??  ?? ANDREW NAPOLITANO
ANDREW NAPOLITANO

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