Las Vegas Review-Journal

Obama enacts security reforms

Bill reverses some data collection, surveillan­ce policies

- By PATRICIA ZENGERLE and WARREN STROBEL REUTERS

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama signed into law on Tuesday legislatio­n passed by Congress earlier in the day reforming a government surveillan­ce program that swept up millions of Americans’ telephone records.

Reversing security policy in place since shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the bill ends a system exposed by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. The spy agency collected and searched records of phone calls looking for terrorism leads but was not allowed to listen to their content.

Passage of the USA Freedom Act, the result of an alliance between Senate Democrats and some of the chamber’s most conservati­ve Republican­s, was a victory for Obama and a setback for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., voted in favor of passage.

After the Senate voted 67-32 on Tuesday to give final congressio­nal approval to the bill, Obama used his Twitter account to say he was glad it had passed. “I’ll sign it as soon as I get it,” the tweet said.

Before voting, senators defeated three amendments proposed by Republican leaders after they reversed themselves and ended efforts to block it.

The House of Representa­tives passed the measure overwhelmi­ngly last month.

In the end, 23 Senate Republican­s voted for the Freedom Act, joining 196 who backed it in the House. In a rift between Republican­s, who control both chambers, House leaders had warned that amendments proposed by McConnell would be a “challenge” for the House that could delay the bill.

A federal appeals court on May 7 ruled the collection of “metadata” illegal.

The new law would require

McConnell: Security undermined

companies such as Verizon and AT&T to collect and store telephone records the same way that they do now for billing purposes.

But instead of routinely feeding U.S. intelligen­ce agencies such data, the companies would be required to turn it over only in response to a government request approved by the secretive Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court.

The Freedom Act is the first major legislativ­e reform of U.S. surveillan­ce since Snowden’s revelation­s two years ago this month led to debate over how to balance Americans’ distrust of intrusive government with fears of terrorist attacks.

Along with the phone records program, two other domestic surveillan­ce programs authorized under the 2001 Patriot Act have been shut down since Sunday.

After Republican Sen. Rand Paul, a 2016 presidenti­al candidate, blocked McConnell’s efforts to keep them going temporaril­y, the Senate missed a deadline to extend legal authoritie­s for certain data collection by the NSA and the FBI.

McConnell made an unusually strong last-ditch argument against the Freedom Act after his amendments failed. “It surely undermines American security by taking one more tool from our war fighters, in my view, at exactly the wrong time,” he said in a Senate speech.

Telephone companies had been less than thrilled about potentiall­y overhaulin­g their record-keeping systems to become the repositori­es of surveillan­ce records.

Together with civil liberties groups, they opposed specific requiremen­ts for how long they must retain any data, which were proposed in some amendments that were later defeated. A Verizon official, for instance, spoke in support of the Freedom Act, without such a mandate, in a Senate hearing last year.

After the vote, Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith praised Congress. “Today’s vote by the Senate on the USA Freedom Act will help to restore the balance between protecting public safety and preserving civil liberties,” Smith said in a statement.

Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden, a leading Senate privacy advocate, voted for the Freedom Act. He pledged that he and his allies would continue pushing for more limits on surveillan­ce.

“This has always been about reforming intelligen­ce policies that do not make America safer and threaten our liberties,” Wyden told reporters.

The American Civil Liberties Union said the Freedom Act was a milestone but did not go far enough. “The passage of the bill is an indication that comprehens­ive reform is possible, but it is not comprehens­ive reform in itself,” ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer said in a statement.

A senior U.S. intelligen­ce official said the bulk telephone data collection system had been shut down since Sunday night.

It was not immediatel­y clear how soon the NSA program would be restarted. The Freedom Act allows it to continue for six months while the new system is establishe­d.

The White House said the administra­tion would move quickly to get it up and running again.

With Obama’s signing of the bill, the executive branch will have to apply to the surveillan­ce court for reauthoriz­ation.

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