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Wiretapping at Its Worst

By Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. Posted October 24, 2007.


A revolving door between the telecommunications industry and federal government ensures that the doors to your personal privacy are wide open.

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It seemed like shocking news last week when the telecommunications giant Verizon admitted it has readily allowed warrantless national security investigators to browse customer records on thousands of occasions. But given the revolving door between the telecom industry and federal government, no one should be surprised by their cozy relationship.

According to OpenSecrets.org, a website run by the Center for Responsive Politics in Washington, D.C., the worlds are well-connected: There is no shortage of government officials who once worked in the telecommunications industry, and no shortage of telecommunications industry execs who once worked for the government.

Many of the men and women who have hopped the fence -- sometimes more than once -- between government and telecom have done so via predictable channels. It's not uncommon, for instance, for aides and commissioners to the Federal Communications Commission to come from or move on to careers in telecommunications. It's arguably not even that surprising. But there are also the executives -- like those who fill Verizon's ranks -- who have spent years fighting for the government's right to pry into consumer data.

In an Oct. 12 letter to Democratic lawmakers, Randal S. Milch, senior vice president and general counsel to Verizon, admitted that, in tens of thousands of instances over the last two years, his company has provided government officials with subscriber information without court orders. According to the letter, that information has included subscriber names and addresses, local and long-distance telephone connection records, and methods and sources of payment.

Milch serves alongside William P. Barr, who is executive vice president and general counsel to Verizon. In Barr's past life, he was an analyst for the CIA who went on to serve as a domestic policy adviser to President Ronald Reagan and as the attorney general of the United States under President George H.W. Bush. Throughout his esteemed government career, and well after he'd moved into the telecommunications industry, Barr has shown a voracious appetite for government surveillance.

In 1995, after he'd made the switch, he told the House Judiciary Committee that "emergency wiretap authority exists under current law with respect to a range of criminal activity. Existing emergency authority has been sparingly used, and I am not aware of any indication of abuse. It is clearly appropriate that the same emergency authority that applies with respect to Mafia conspiracies also applies to terrorist conspiracies."

He argued that, when conducting surveillance, a single subpoena issued by the government should be sufficient to cover multiple telephones registered to an individual target. "It is impractical to identify a particular phone. This is perfectly in line with constitutional protections. After all, the right to privacy guaranteed under the Fourth Amendment is an individual's right to privacy; it is not an inanimate object's right to privacy. Roving wiretaps targeted at particular suspects rather than specific phones should not cause alarm."

Barr's testimony was cited in the House Report on the Comprehensive Antiterrorism Act of 1995 as justification for an expansion of federal wiretapping authority. The following year, he advocated on behalf of the use of intelligence information in domestic law enforcement proceedings in cases of suspected terrorism.

And that was all before Sept. 11, 2001. After the terrorist attacks, Barr re-emerged on Capitol Hill to lend his support to controversial measures such as beefed up executive privilege, broadened Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act authority, and both the use of military tribunals in specific and the USA PATRIOT Act more broadly.

Barr represents perhaps the most overtly wiretap-friendly liaison between the telecom industry and the government of the United States, but he's far from alone at Verizon. Peter Davidson, Verizon's chief lobbyist, was once a staffer in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel and served as general counsel to former Texas Rep. Dick Armey when Armey was House majority leader.

Additionally, a former senior vice president at Verizon, Edward Whelan, was from mid 2001 to 2004 the principal deputy assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel. He clerked as well for Justice Antonin Scalia and, later, wrote an article defending Justice Samuel Alito who, in memos that eerily presage the current FISA debate, argued “an executive branch official who authorized the illegal wiretapping of U.S. citizens without a warrant should be immune from lawsuits,” according to Charlie Savage of the Boston Globe. The Alito memos were written in his Justice Department days, before he was appointed to the Supreme Court.

None of this necessarily means Verizon and other telecom firms can't be trusted to honor our privacy and the law. But it does show that if the executive branch wants access to nominally protected information, or the Congress wants to expand the legal framework in which surveillance is allowed, the doors are wide open and their friends are eagerly waiting.

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See more stories tagged with: telecommunications, wiretapping, surveillance, telecom, verizon, government spying

Brian Beutler is the Washington correspondent for the Media Consortium, a network of progressive media organizations, including AlterNet.

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Posted by: NoPCZone on Oct 24, 2007 12:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This stuff has been coming for a long time and like a cat seems to have multiple lives. It's way past time every candidate for Congress or the White House get sharp, pointed and unambiguous questioning on this sh*t.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

And where the hell are those "small government" advocates when you need them the most?
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 24, 2007 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to see the same "Libertarians" who call for reducing government to call for an ABOLITION of the CIA, FBI, FCC, FTC, NSA, DEA, Warfare, Corporate Welfare, etc ...

The sad part about all this is like the Democrats, they only care to lick Wall Street's boots instead of act like real Libertarians. Try joining a Libertarian Party and bringing up the issue of Civil Liberties and you'll be lucky to receive a scorn, usually getting KICKED OUT is the typical response.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

AP story about liberal Democrat Lanny Davis
Posted by: pammers on Oct 24, 2007 8:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the story a couple of months back, Mr. Davis said his committee looking into the NSA wiretapping, was impressed by the "safeguards built into the system to protect the rights of American citizens."

Now you know the rest of the story.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Big gov't, small gov't
Posted by: jjoensuu on Oct 28, 2007 7:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sadly in the U.S. the complains about "too big a government" only start popping up when the discussion turns to things such as social security payments. It never seems to come up in discussions about issues such as the ridiculous Pentagon budget or the amount spent on the Iraq war.

So deeply dorky.

But after all it is U.S. citizens who grow up saluting the flag and pledging allegiance to the government, NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

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