US courts must stop shielding government surveillance programs from accountability | Patrick Toomey and Alex Abdo
The NSA's surveillance of Americans' internet use raises serious constitutional concerns, but the government claims a lawsuit against the program would compromise state secrets'
Imagine the government has searched your home without a warrant or probable cause, rifling through your files, your bedroom dresser, your diary. You sue, arguing that the public record shows it violated your fourth amendment rights. The government claims that it has a defense, but that its defense is secret. The court dismisses the case.
That's precisely what the federal government has increasingly said it can do in cases related to national security - under the so-called state secret privilege." It can violate constitutional rights, and then defeat any effort at accountability by claiming that its defense is secret - without even showing its evidence to a court behind closed doors.
The latest installment in this troubling trend involves the National Security Agency's monitoring of Americans' international internet communications.
Patrick Toomey is deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union's National Security Project
Alex Abdo is founding litigation director for the Knight First Amendment Institute
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