A National Security Agency surveillance program mistakenly violated the Constitution and misled the secret court overseeing the program, according to a redacted secret court opinion released Wednesday. The NSA mistakenly collected as many as between 40,000 and 50,000 wholly domestic emailed communications each year between 2008 and 2011 before the program was halted by a federal judge, a secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) opinion found.
Federal Judge John D. Bates, acting in his capacity as a judge on the FISC, wrote in the opinion that this was “the third instance in less than three years in which the government has disclosed a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major collection program.” The program was authorized to continue after the NSA made changes to the process for deleting inadvertently collected communications that take place between parties within the United States.
The violations, which were unintentional, represent a relatively small fraction of the communications monitored each year under the program, which numbered in the millions, according to the opinion. Nevertheless, they also represent violations of the law authorizing the surveillance, section 702 of the Patriot Act, which only sanctions monitoring of communications that are assumed to contain at least one point of contact originating abroad. In defending surveillance programs, legislators have often wrongly asserted that the NSA never collects Americans’ data.
“The FISA Court has noted that this collection violates the spirit of the law, but the government has failed to address this concern in the two years since this ruling was issued,” Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden said in a statement shortly after the opinion was released. “This ruling makes it clear that FISA Section 702, as written, is insufficient to adequately protect the civil liberties and privacy rights of law-abiding Americans and should be reformed.”
Administration officials have argued that the secret court provides a substantive check on NSA surveillance powers, pointing to the fact that the court has, as in this instance, occasionally rebuked the government for exceeding its powers. But civil libertarian groups focused on the disclosure that the court had been repeatedly misled. “These opinions indicate that the NSA misrepresented its activities to the court just as it misrepresented them to Congress and the public, and they provide further evidence that current oversight mechanisms are far too feeble,” Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU’s deputy legal director, said in a statement Wednesday.
The secret FISA court opinion declaring the NSA program unconstitutional was released in response to a lawsuit from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The Obama administration later released several other secret foreign intelligence surveillance court opinions and administration documents related to government surveillance powers.









