In another turn in the debate over NSA surveillance, the Foreign Intelligence Court is facing new calls to release its secret opinions on phone data searches under the Patriot Act.
Lawyers for the ACLU and a media program at Yale Law School filed a motion Monday asking the FISA court to release its rulings on an expansive portion of the Patriot Act, Section 215, which is the basis for the NSA’s review of millions of Verizon phone lines, first reported by The Guardian last week.
Lawyers for the ACLU say the motion is a key tactic to compel the government to explain the legal authority for its surveillance authority, rather than operating under “secret law.” ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer said “there should be no room for secret law,” arguing that there is a public right to evaluate the scope of the program, if not its operational details.
The motion argues that release of the opinions is now appropriate because “President Obama and members of the congressional intelligence committees have publicly discussed the program and expressly invited a public debate about the legitimacy of the government’s surveillance activities.”









