NSA versus Verizon - San Diego County Political Buzz | Examiner.com
In an effort to test the waters, a large unnamed phone service provider tried to challenge the National Security Agency (NSA) and not pass along the coveted “metadata” the federal intelligence agencies claim is essential to fight the “war on terror.” It didn’t go well for the phone company, on March 20th they were
ordered by the court, under double secret Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court (FISC) Judge Rosemary Collyer to continue breaking
the privacy agreements companies make with their customers. The declassified opinion came from a secret “appellate” court most American’s don’t even know it exists.
...
In the Verizon case, the FISA judge ruled that Verizon could not bring a Fourth
Amendment claim asserting unreasonable search and seizure against its
customers because the Fourth Amendment is an individual claim and cannot
be asserted by a proxy.
...
Therefore, the FISA judge ruled Verizon had no standing to raise
unreasonable search and seizure on behalf of its customers under the
Fourth Amendment.
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