I found it. It wasn't CAIR, it was a Saudi charity....

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/surveillance/2007-08-05-thedocument_N.htm

Secret call log at heart of wiretap challenge

By Paul Elias, Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — In open court and legal filings it's referred to
simply as "the Document."
Federal officials claim its contents are so sensitive to national
security that it is stored in a bombproof safe in Washington and
viewed only by prosecutors with top secret security clearances and a
few select federal judges.

The Document, described by those who have seen it as a National
Security Administration log of calls intercepted between an Islamic
charity and its American lawyers, is at the heart of what legal
experts say may be the strongest case against the Bush
administration's warrantless eavesdropping program. The federal
appeals court in San Francisco plans to hear arguments in the case
Aug. 15.

The charity's lawyer scoffs at the often surreal lengths the
government has taken to keep the Document under wraps.

"Believe me," Oakland attorney Jon Eisenberg said, "if this appeared
on the front pages of newspapers, national security would not be
jeopardized."

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Bush administration | San Francisco | US
citizens | National Security Agency | Haramain | Document
Eisenberg represents the now-defunct U.S. arm of the Al-Haramain
Islamic Foundation, a prominent Saudi charity that was shut down by
authorities in that kingdom after the U.S. Treasury Department
declared it a terrorist organization that was allegedly funding
al-Qaeda.

He and his colleagues sued the U.S. government in Portland, Ore.'s
federal court, alleging the NSA had illegally intercepted telephone
calls without warrants between Soliman al-Buthi, the Saudi national
who headed Al-Haramain's U.S. branch, and his two American lawyers,
Wendell Belew and Asim Ghafoor.

Unlike dozens of other lawyers who have sued alleging similar
violations of civil liberties stemming from the Bush administration's
secret terrorism surveillance program, Eisenberg's team had what it
claimed to be unequivocal proof: the Document.

In 2004, as the Treasury Department was considering whether to include
the group on its list of terrorist organizations, Al-Haramain's
Washington lawyer, Lynne Bernabei, asked to see the evidence.

That's when, in a case of bureaucratic bungling, Treasury officials
mistakenly handed over the call log — which has the words "top secret"
stamped on every page — along with press clippings and other
unclassified documents deemed relevant to the case.

Six weeks later, the FBI was dispatched to Bernabei's office to
retrieve it. But by then she had passed out copies to five other
lawyers, a Washington Post reporter and two Al-Haramain directors —
al-Buthi and Pirouz Sedaghaty, also known as Pete Seda.

Still, the lawyers were unsure what they'd been given until December
2005, when The New York Times published a story exposing the Bush
administration's warrantless wiretapping program. The attorneys
involved in the Al-Haramain case suddenly realized that the call log
was proof their clients had been eavesdropped on, and they sued.

An Oregon judge soon ordered Eisenberg and his colleagues to turn over
all copies, but in an odd legal twist, U.S. District Court Judge Garr
King allowed the lawsuit to go forward with Eisenberg's team forced to
rely on their memories of the Document.

Even the laptop computer Eisenberg used to draft legal documents
citing the Document is scheduled to be scrubbed clean by government
agents Wednesday.

Three judges in the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals will now decide whether the wiretapping program authorized
shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks was illegal.

Each time the judges want to view the Document, a Department of
Justice "court security officer" hand carries it from Washington to
San Francisco, then returns with it and any notes the judges made that
are deemed sensitive, according to court documents.

DOJ spokesman Dean Boyd declined to comment on the case or the
handling of the Document.

Even without the Document itself, legal observers say Eisenberg's case
may have the best chance of succeeding among the many legal challenges
to the wireless wiretapping program, which the Bush administration
discontinued earlier this year.

Belew and Ghafoor, the two lawyers whose calls were allegedly
intercepted by NSA, appear to be the only U.S. citizens with actual
proof that the government eavesdropped on them. They're demanding $1
million each from the federal government and the unfreezing of
Al-Haramain's assets.

The 9th Circuit has scheduled arguments for Aug. 15 on the
administration's request to dismiss the Al-Haramain case and another
lawsuit by telecommunication customers who allege logs of their calls
were illegally accessed by the NSA.

In court papers filed last year, then-National Intelligence Director
John Negroponte and NSA Director Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander urged a
judge to toss the case because to defend it would require the
government to disclose "state secrets" that would expose the United
States' anti-terrorist efforts.

Last month, the Bush administration reiterated its position in court
documents submitted to the appeals court urging dismissal of the case.

"Whether plaintiffs were subjected to surveillance is a state secret,
and information tending to confirm or deny that fact is privileged,"
the filing stated.

More than 50 other lawsuits pending before a San Francisco federal
judge are awaiting the appeals court's ruling in the two cases, but
none have the kind of hard evidence Al-Haramain purports to have —
through its lawyers' recollections of the call log — that warrantless
eavesdropping of American citizens occurred.

"The biggest obstacle this litigation has faced is the problem showing
someone was actually subjected to surveillance," said Duke University
law professor Curtis Bradley.

But he said the Al-Haramain lawsuit "has a very good chance to proceed
farther than the other cases because it's impossible for the
government to erase (the lawyers') memories of the document."

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



On 8/12/07, Dana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> there actually was a court case headed to trial. It is moot now. I
> need to finish something for work, but i'll post the link later if
> nobody has found it. I thnk it was CAIR attorneys. I grant you that
> some of their clients might in fact be bad peopel working against US
> interests. Certainly the right wing seemsto think so.
>
>  Nonetheless there are definitely constitutional issues with
> eavesdropping on US citizens engaged in attorney work product.
>
> Also the law allows listening to conversations "about" a foreign
> national. Which means run away run away! You've been talking to me and
> to Larry and to Gel. So supposing one of us is deemed dangerous
> for some bizarre reason, you are all eligible for eavesdropping.
>
> Oh brave new world.
>
>
> On 8/12/07, Loathe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Who has to be able to prove the system was used against them, but the
> > records are secret so you can't prove you're on the list.
> >
> > It's the ACLU case all over again.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Vivec [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2007 1:00 PM
> > To: CF-Community
> > Subject: Re: Nobody has commented on this?
> >
> > What some folk will say is that it will not stand up to a challenge in
> > court.
> > But that challenge has to come from someone :)
> >
> >
> >
> > 

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