The secret court that oversees the National Security Agency surveillance programs ruled on Friday that court opinions regarding the agency’s use of the Patriot Act must be released. The ruling is potentially a major victory for the ACLU, which had sued for the release of the opinions.
“The surveillance court has recognized the importance of transparency to the ongoing public debate about the NSA’s spying,” said ACLU attorney Alex Abdo to MSNBC.com in response to the ruling, hailing it as a “rebuke” of the government’s increasing reliance on “secret law.”
According to recent leaks about the NSA’s telephone and internet surveillance, the Obama administration has mostly found an ally in the court as it sought to expand its surveillance powers under the Patriot Act. (The NSA expanded review of millions of phone lines under a business record section of the law, Section 215.)
In Friday’s ruling, Judge Dennis Saylor ordered “the government to conduct a declassification review” of those unreleased opinions regarding Patriot Act powers. Once the opinions are scrubbed for any potentially damaging national security information, Judge Saylor wrote they would be released because “the public interest might be served by their publication.”









