Something I found very interesting about the New York Times they acted so
surprised that this was occurring; however in 1982 they printed the
following:

COURT SAYS U.S. SPY AGENCY CAN TAP OVERSEAS MESSAGES

By DAVID BURNHAM, SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK TIMES (NYT) 1051 words Published:
November 7, 1982

A Federal appeals court has ruled that the National Security Agency may
lawfully intercept messages between United States citizens and people
overseas, even if there is no cause to believe the Americans are foreign
agents, and then provide summaries of these messages to the Federal Bureau
of Investigation.

Because the National Security Agency is among the largest and most secretive
intelligence agencies and because millions of electronic messages enter and
leave the United States each day, lawyers familiar with the intelligence
agency consider the decision to mark a significant increase in the legal
authority of the Government to keep track of its citizens.

Reverses 1979 Ruling

The Oct. 21 decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit involves the Government's surveillance of a Michigan born lawyer,
Abdeen Jabara, who for many years has represented Arab-American citizens and
alien residents in court. Some of his clients had been investigated by the
F.B.I.

Mr. Jabara sued the F.B.I, and the National Security Agency, and in 1979
Federal District Judge Ralph M. Freeman ruled that the agency's acquisition
of several of Mr. Jabara's overseas messages violated his Fourth Amendment
right to be free of ''unreasonable searches and seizures.'' Last month's
decision reverses that ruling.

In earlier court proceedings, the F.B.I. acknowledged that it then
disseminated the information to 17 other law-enforcement or intelligence
agencies and three foreign governments.

The opinion of the three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals held, ''The
simple fact remains that the N.S.A. lawfully acquired Jabara's messages.''

The court ruled further that the lawyer's Fourth Amendment rights ''were not
violated when summaries of his overseas telegraphic messages'' were
furnished to the investigative bureau ''irrespective of whether there was
reasonable cause to believe that he was a foreign agent.''


http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60F13FB3C5D0C748CDDA80994DA
484D81


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