
“The undisclosed use of warrantless surveillance to win prosecutions is also troubling from a constitutional standpoint, foreclosing a rare opportunity to discover Section 702 abuses and challenge the law, which civil liberties advocates have argued is unconstitutional.”
Read more: https://theintercept.com/2017/11/30/nsa-surveillance-fisa-section-702/
Related posts:
Just What I Was Afraid Of: Feinstein To Hold NSA Hearings
The latest casualty in the global pension catastrophe is…
Drive Drunk or Asleep, Wherever You Want!
Manchester Bomber Was Product of West's Libya/Syria Intervention
Now They Tell Us: China Debt Levels 'Unknown'
Secession and Nullification in Colorado
Snowden Is No Traitor: 55% to 34%
Hillary Clinton: Stop helping terrorists, Silicon Valley – weaken encryption
Lew Rockwell: It's Time To Take Back The Republic
Brzezinski: ‘Global Political Awakening’ Making Syrian War Difficult
Mark Thornton exclusive RT TV interview on Bitcoin
Israeli police head to US to aid in Boston Marathon bombing investigation
Hong Kong 2012 net gold flow to China hit record high
Supreme Court Rules that Citizens Can Hold Federal Government Liable for Abuse by Law Enforcement Of...
Pictures From A Cyprus ATM Line