Texarkana Gazette

No more NSA collection of U.S. phone records either way

- AP Intelligen­ce Writer By Ken Dilanian

WASHINGTON— However Congress resolves its impasse over government surveillan­ce, this much is clear: The National Security Agency will ultimately be out of the business of collecting and storing Americans’ calling records.

Aiming for passage this afternoon, the Senate on Monday prepared to make modest changes to a House bill that would end the collection while preserving other surveillan­ce authoritie­s. But while Congress debated, the law authorizin­g the collection expired at midnight Sunday.

The NSA had stopped gathering the records from phone companies hours before the deadline. And other post9/11 surveillan­ce provisions considered more effective than the phone-call collection program also lapsed, leading

intelligen­ce officials to warn of critical gaps.

The legislatio­n now before the Senate, known as the USA Freedom Act, would reauthoriz­e the surveillan­ce but would phase out NSA phone records collection over time. It passed the House overwhelmi­ngly and is backed by President Barack Obama. Sen. Rand Paul, who doesn’t believe it goes far enough in restrictin­g the government, objected anew on Monday, but he can’t stop a vote to end debate scheduled for Tuesday morning.

If the bill becomes law over the next few days, the NSA will resume gathering the phone records but only for a transition period of six months, in the House version, or a year in the Senate version.

If the bill fails amid congressio­nal politics, the collection cannot resume, period.

The turn of events is a victory for Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who disclosed the phone records collection in 2013. Senators on the intelligen­ce committee had been issuing veiled and vague warnings about the program for years, saying if Americans only knew how the Patriot Act was being interprete­d they would be outraged.

But it was Snowden who revealed the details.

Because of Snowden, “people have some more insight into exactly how they are being spied upon and how the law has been twisted to authorize mass surveillan­ce of people who have no connection to a crime or terrorism,” said Harley Geiger, senior counsel with the Center for Democracy and Technology, an advocacy group that supports the USA Freedom Act.

Still, the current legislatio­n would hardly count as a defeat for the NSA, Snowden’s former employer. Agency officials, including former Director Keith Alexander, have long said they had no problem with ending their collection of phone records, as long as they could continue to search the data held by the phone companies, which the legislatio­n allows them to do.

The USA Freedom Act doesn’t address the vast majority of Snowden revelation­s, which concern NSA mass surveillan­ce of global Internet traffic that often sweeps in American communicat­ion.

If the legislatio­n fails and the surveillan­ce provisions expire, that would be a blow to U.S. intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies. Besides the phone-records provision, expiration of the Patriot Act has meant a halt in the FBI’s authority to gather business records in terrorism and espionage investigat­ions, and to more easily eavesdrop on suspects who are discarding cellphones to avoid surveillan­ce.

“There are specific tools that our national security profession­als have previously used … that they can as of today no longer use because of the partisan dysfunctio­n in the United States Senate,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Monday.

The amendments proposed by Sen. Richard Burr, the North Carolina Republican who chairs the intelligen­ce committee, were designed, he said, to win quick House approval. One requires the director of national intelligen­ce to certify that the NSA can effectivel­y search records held by the phone companies in terrorism investigat­ions. Another would require the phone companies to notify the government if they change their policy on how long they held the records.

A third, to extend the transition from six months to 12 months, promises to be somewhat controvers­ial. But lawmakers may face a choice between controvers­y and the continued expiration of laws used to hunt spies and terrorists.

On Monday afternoon, House backers of the USA Freedom Act denounced the Senate’s plan to amend it.

“These amendments only serve to weaken the Housepasse­d bill and postpone timely enactment of legislatio­n that responsibl­y protects national security while enhancing civil liberty protection­s,” said a statement by Republican Bob Goodlatte of Virginia, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, and three other members.

“The House is not likely to accept the changes proposed by Senator McConnell. Section 215 has already expired. These amendments will likely make that sunset permanent. The Senate must act quickly to pass the USA Freedom Act without amendment.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., talks with a reporter Sunday as he leaves the Capitol following his address to the Senate in Washington. The Senate was unable to make a deal to extend contested anti-terror provisions and as a result, the post-Sept. 11 programs...
Associated Press Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., talks with a reporter Sunday as he leaves the Capitol following his address to the Senate in Washington. The Senate was unable to make a deal to extend contested anti-terror provisions and as a result, the post-Sept. 11 programs...
 ?? Associated Press ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., walks to the Senate Chamber on Sunday to begin a special session to extend surveillan­ce programs, in Washington.
Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., walks to the Senate Chamber on Sunday to begin a special session to extend surveillan­ce programs, in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States