Article HS5Y Hey NSA: Even If NSA Was Collecting The Info For You, The Fourth Amendment Still Applies

Hey NSA: Even If NSA Was Collecting The Info For You, The Fourth Amendment Still Applies

by
Mike Masnick
from Techdirt on (#HS5Y)
We've already written a few articles about the confirmation that AT&T is going above and beyond what's required by the law to be a "valued partner" of the NSA in helping with its surveillance campaign. While it's long been known that AT&T was giving fairly direct access to its backbone (thank you Mark Klein!), the latest released documents provide much more detail -- including that AT&T often does the initial "sifting" before forwarding content it finds to the NSA. To some NSA apologists, this is proof that the NSA isn't so bad, because it doesn't have full unencumbered access to everything, but rather is relying on AT&T to do the searching and then handing over what it finds. Of course, as the documents showed, it's only in some cases that AT&T searches first, in others it appears that AT&T does, in fact, have full access.

But, still, as Cindy Cohn at the EFF is noting, if the NSA thinks that having AT&T sift first and then voluntarily hand stuff over somehow absolves it of violating the 4th Amendment with these collections, well, then the NSA is wrong.

First some law: the Fourth Amendment applies whenever a "private party acts as an 'instrument or agent' of the government." This rule is clear. In the Ninth Circuit, where our Jewel v. NSA case against mass spying is pending, it has been held to apply when an employee opens someone's package being shipped in order to obtain a DEA reward (US v. Walther), when a hotel employee conducts a search while the police watch (US v. Reed), and when an airline conducts a search under a program designed by the FAA (United States v. Davis), among others.

The concept behind this rule is straightforward: the government cannot simply outsource its seizures and searches to a private party and thereby avoid protecting our constitutional rights. It seems that the NSA may have been trying to do just that. But it won't work.

Given that the EFF is already challenging this collection in the Jewel v. NSA case, it seems like the latest leak may be somewhat helpful.

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