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SAN FRANCISCO -- Before there was Edward Snowden and the
leak of explosive documents showing widespread government surveillance,
there was Mark Klein - a telecommunications technician who alleged that AT&T was allowing U.S. spies to siphon vast amounts of customer data without warrants.
Klein's allegations and the news reports about them launched dozens of consumer lawsuits in early 2006 against the government and telecommunications companies.
The lawsuits alleged invasion of privacy and targeted the very same
provisions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that are at the
center of the latest public outcry.
That was
seven years ago, and the warrantless collection continues, perhaps on an
even greater scale, underscoring just how difficult the recently
outraged will have in pursuing any new lawsuits, like the one the
American Civil Liberties Union filed against the government on Tuesday
in New York federal court.
"I warned whoever I
could," Klein said in telephone interview from his home in Alameda, a
city across the bay from San Francisco. "I was angry then. I'm angrier
now."
All the lawsuits prompted by Klein's
disclosures were bundled up and shipped to a single San Francisco
federal judge to handle. Nearly all the cases were tossed out when
Congress in 2008 granted the telecommunications retroactive immunity
from legal challenges, a law the U.S. Supreme Court upheld. Congress'
action will make it difficult to sue the companies caught up in the
latest disclosures.
The only lawsuit left from
that bundle is one aimed directly at the government. And that case has
been tied up in litigation over the U.S. Justice Department's insistence
that airing the case in court would jeopardize national security.
"The
United States government under both administrations has been
stonewalling us in court," said Lee Tien, an attorney with the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, which represents the consumers who filed
that lawsuit. EFF has also filed a related lawsuit seeking the Justice
Department's legal interpretation of the law that the government is
apparently relying on to collect consumers' electronic data without a
warrant.
James Clapper, director of national
intelligence, personally urged U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White to
throw out the remaining lawsuit. Clapper wrote the judge in September
that the government risks "exceptionally grave damage to the national
security of the United States" if forced to fight the lawsuit.
But
on Friday, federal prosecutors asked the judge to delay making any
decision until it can report back to the court on July 12 what the
latest disclosures may mean to the lawsuit. Tien and other EFF lawyers
are also assessing the newest disclosures to determine if they bolster
their case.
Snowden, 29, a former CIA employee
who most recently worked as a contractor for the National Security
Agency, admitted leaking details of two secret government surveillance programs.
He
revealed a top-secret court order issued April 25 by the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court that granted a three-month renewal for
the large-scale collection of American phone records. That program,
the same one Klein tried to expose, allows the NSA to gather hundreds
of millions of U.S. phone records to search for possible links to
terrorists abroad.
Snowden also disclosed another program that allows the government to tap into nine U.S. Internet companies and gather all communications to detect suspicious behavior that begins overseas.
On
Tuesday, Klein said that for a number of reasons, Snowden's disclosures
sparked more public outrage than his own revelations did more than
seven years ago.
For one thing, Klein said,
Snowden had direct access to a secret court order and details of the
program, while Klein pieced together the government's surveillance
through internal AT&T documents and in discussions with colleagues
who worked on the project.
"The government
painted me as a nobody, a technician who was merely speculating," said
Klein, who made his disclosures after he accepted a buyout and retired
from AT&T in 2004. "Now we have an actual copy of a FISA court
order. There it is in black and white. It's undisputable. They can't
deny that."
Klein also said the allegations
that the government was accessing social media sites such as Facebook
may have gotten the attention of more - and younger - people who weren't
bothered by his initial disclosures.
"Now, the government is intruding in places they go," said Klein, 68. "That probably got their attention."
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