Libertarian Cato Institute Sues DOJ, FBI Over Records Of Warrantless Surveillance Audits
The Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank that’s been part of a broad coalition of pro-privacy groups worried about an anti-spying law that’s been used in the past to surveil Americans, sued the government Friday for allegedly withholding audit records on the program.
Cato brought the lawsuit in federal court in Washington, accusing the FBI and the Justice Department of not coughing up information the think tank had previously filed for under the Freedom of Information Act. The requested records dealt with audits of the government’s compliance with Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA.
Section 702 allows U.S. agencies to keep tabs on communications of foreigners abroad but has also caught communications between Americans and foreign nationals that had nothing to do with anti-terror probes, leading critics to label it “warrantless surveillance.”
“When the FBI stonewalls public records requests about a massive surveillance program that gobbles up billions of communications yearly — including yours and mine — it’s violating the law… A law its agents and managers are sworn to uphold,” said Cato senior fellow Patrick Eddington in an email to HuffPost.
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment late on Friday.
Every few years, there are fights over the renewal of FISA. Its advocates concede that the law allowed too broad a net to be cast on U.S. citizens’ communications with foreigners but argue that those issues have mostly been remedied. The latest round of debate happened in April, and split along unusual partisan lines on Capitol Hill.
Pro-privacy advocates in both parties argued for dramatically overhauling or allowing the law to lapse, while security