The American Civil Liberties Union is suing the U.S. government, demanding the release of information about its program to conduct surveillance of Americans’ international communications.
The civil rights group pointed to former CIA employee Edward Snowden – who blew the lid off the National Security Agency’s secret surveillance program, insisting until the disclosures, little was known about the NSA’s authority.
The ACLU says that while questions remain, what is clear is that the government has been sweeping up “Americans’ international communications without any court order and with little oversight.”
The group said in the lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in New York on Monday, that a number of federal agencies, including the Department of Defense, the Department of State, the National Security Agency, and the Central Intelligence Agency have refused to make many documents public under the Freedom of Information Act.
The lawsuit requests that the court mandate that the agencies turn over the documents. The lawsuit points to Executive Order 12,333, signed by then-President Ronald Reagan in 1981, which allows the surveillance of foreigners outside the United States. The Obama Administration has pointed to it to justify the NSA’s actions.
The lawsuit contends that under the order, however, the NSA has been gathering information of “countless Americans,” including “nearly 5 billion records per day on the location of cell phones, including Americans’ cell phones.”
The ACLU also wants to find out what protections Americans have if their communications are intercepted for the sake of national security.









