http://theweek.com/article/index/262945/the-nsa-has-a-shocking-new-excuse-for-destroying-evidence#axzz34TzFIna7


"One thing that makes reporting on the NSA so difficult is that you have to 
deconstruct their statements like Derrida to figure out what they're actually 
saying. (This is why all responsible people read Marcy Wheeler.)
"Luckily, here's an NSA issue anyone can sink their teeth into. It demonstrates 
the squirmy NSA legal technique, and how by its own logic the agency ought to 
be broken up or closed altogether.
"The background is that the NSA is being sued around the block by all manner of 
people over the Snowden revelations. Pertaining to a suit brought by the 
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a previous court order had instructed the NSA 
to preserve data that it had collected under Section 702 of the Amendments Act 
to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
"That order has since been reversed, because the NSA has claimed (in addition 
to the usual business about how stopping this program will grievously harm 
American citizens) that it physically cannot store all the information it 
collects under Section 702. As Andrea Peterson atThe Washington Post reported, 
the NSA's deputy director, Richard Ledgett, wrote a rather astonishing court 
filing, in which he said that "a requirement to preserve all data acquired 
under Section 702 presents significant operational problems, only one of which 
is that the NSA may have to shut down all systems and databases that contain 
Section 702 information." (Emphasis added.) Ironically, Ledgett claims that 
previous privacy restrictions that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court 
placed on the program necessitate deleting the data the EFF wants preserved. 
You can practically see Ledgett sticking his finger in the eye of the EFF's 
legal director.
"In any case, as Peterson notes, this puts the EFF in a strange position, since 
it is now arguing to preserve evidence for legal purposes it would ultimately 
want destroyed as a policy.
"But aside from the legal arcana, this is an excellent example of the 
Kafkaesque logic that predominates when it it comes to our intelligence 
agencies. The NSA is almost saying, "We've got your privacy protections in 
here, honest, but unfortunately it just so happens that these protections mean 
we have to destroy all this evidence related to your lawsuit." Whatever the 
situation, it just so happens that the intelligence apparatus is regretfully 
excused from accountability. Marcy Wheeler is constantly uncovering various 
iterations of this stuff.
"I'm skeptical that the data preservation the EFF is asking for is impossible. 
But the really troubling possibility is that the NSA is actually right. It's 
anybody's guess precisely how much data the NSAis shifting around, but it's 
reportedly in the exabytes overall. So yes, it might be impossible for the 
agency to store more than a few weeks or so of the data it's collecting.
"The NSA's legal squirming is bad enough. But an agency writing itself a blank 
check to allegedly destroy evidence based on the sheer size and complexity of 
the possibly illegal program in questionis another thing entirely. There 
shouldn't be an "unless your dragnet surveillance program is reallybig" 
exception to the Fourth Amendment.

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