Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017

Before June 2013, civil society and much of Congress were largely in the dark about the extent of the surveillance activities of the National Security Agency and the circumlocutions of statute undertaken by the White House and the Department of Justice. After the releases by Edward Snowden to s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Patrice McDermott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SJSU Scholarworks 2018-09-01
Series:Secrecy and Society
Subjects:
NSA
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/2/
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spelling doaj-f816924d81204128a924acb79d97edca2020-11-24T20:52:11ZengSJSU ScholarworksSecrecy and Society2377-61882018-09-0121Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017Patrice McDermott0Government Information Watch Before June 2013, civil society and much of Congress were largely in the dark about the extent of the surveillance activities of the National Security Agency and the circumlocutions of statute undertaken by the White House and the Department of Justice. After the releases by Edward Snowden to specific journalists, the mendacity of Intelligence Community lawyers and leaders, the evasions of the law and manipulation of the FISA Court by the White House working with the Justice Department, and the scope of the violations of the Fourth Amendment protections of U.S. Persons (USPs) became increasingly apparent.2 This article reviews the changes that were initiated in the Executive Branch (and to a lesser extent in the Legislative Branch), the role civil society played in pushing and utilizing greater transparency, and what the changes mean for government accountability to the public.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/2/congressional oversightExecutive Order 12333FISAFISCForeign Intelligence Surveillance ActForeign Intelligence Surveillance CourtMichael HaydenIntelligence CommunityNational Security Agencynational security intelligenceNSAPresident’s Surveillance ProgramEdward SnowdenU.S. Department of Justicewarrantless surveillance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrice McDermott
spellingShingle Patrice McDermott
Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
Secrecy and Society
congressional oversight
Executive Order 12333
FISA
FISC
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
Michael Hayden
Intelligence Community
National Security Agency
national security intelligence
NSA
President’s Surveillance Program
Edward Snowden
U.S. Department of Justice
warrantless surveillance
author_facet Patrice McDermott
author_sort Patrice McDermott
title Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
title_short Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
title_full Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
title_fullStr Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
title_full_unstemmed Secrets and Lies — Exposed and Combatted: Warrantless Surveillance Under and Around the Law 2001-2017
title_sort secrets and lies — exposed and combatted: warrantless surveillance under and around the law 2001-2017
publisher SJSU Scholarworks
series Secrecy and Society
issn 2377-6188
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Before June 2013, civil society and much of Congress were largely in the dark about the extent of the surveillance activities of the National Security Agency and the circumlocutions of statute undertaken by the White House and the Department of Justice. After the releases by Edward Snowden to specific journalists, the mendacity of Intelligence Community lawyers and leaders, the evasions of the law and manipulation of the FISA Court by the White House working with the Justice Department, and the scope of the violations of the Fourth Amendment protections of U.S. Persons (USPs) became increasingly apparent.2 This article reviews the changes that were initiated in the Executive Branch (and to a lesser extent in the Legislative Branch), the role civil society played in pushing and utilizing greater transparency, and what the changes mean for government accountability to the public.
topic congressional oversight
Executive Order 12333
FISA
FISC
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
Michael Hayden
Intelligence Community
National Security Agency
national security intelligence
NSA
President’s Surveillance Program
Edward Snowden
U.S. Department of Justice
warrantless surveillance
url https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/secrecyandsociety/vol2/iss1/2/
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