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How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street

 

 

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ivanhec at gmail

Nov 3, 2009, 5:55 PM

Post #1 of 47 (1566 views)
Permalink
How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street

The answer is both more mundane and more alarming. Prosecutors are
using the FBI's massive surveillance system, DCSNet, which stands for
Digital Collection System Network. According to Wired magazine, this
system connects FBI wiretapping rooms to switches controlled by
traditional land-line operators, internet-telephony providers and
cellular companies. It can be used to instantly wiretap almost any
communications device in the U.S. — wireless or tethered.

http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/blog/archives/2009/10/how_prosecutors.html;jsessionid=ABTR4HPERGBDFQE1GHPCKHWATMY32JVN

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pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 3, 2009, 8:13 PM

Post #2 of 47 (1530 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On November 4, 2009 12:55:45 PM +1100 "Ivan ." <ivanhec [at] gmail> wrote:

> The answer is both more mundane and more alarming. Prosecutors are
> using the FBI's massive surveillance system, DCSNet, which stands for
> Digital Collection System Network. According to Wired magazine, this
> system connects FBI wiretapping rooms to switches controlled by
> traditional land-line operators, internet-telephony providers and
> cellular companies. It can be used to instantly wiretap almost any
> communications device in the U.S. — wireless or tethered.
>
> http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/blog/archives/2009/10/how_prosecutors.h
> tml;jsessionid=ABTR4HPERGBDFQE1GHPCKHWATMY32JVN
>

Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything. Furthermore
every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.

But other than that, it's really troubling....

Paul Schmehl, If it isn't already
obvious, my opinions are my own
and not those of my employer.
******************************************
WARNING: Check the headers before replying

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hso at nosneros

Nov 3, 2009, 8:39 PM

Post #3 of 47 (1525 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 10:13:24PM -0600, Paul Schmehl wrote:
>Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything. Furthermore
>every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
>the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
>sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
>your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.
>
>But other than that, it's really troubling....

um, have you been off planet for the last 8 years or something?
http://bit.ly/Cpwam
http://bit.ly/2AMX6O
http://bit.ly/guIGS
http://bit.ly/vKLgB
http://bit.ly/L6xP7
http://bit.ly/18chv

--
Holt Sorenson
hso [at] nosneros
www.nosneros.net/hso

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frank2 at dc949

Nov 3, 2009, 8:46 PM

Post #4 of 47 (1527 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 8:13 PM, Paul Schmehl <pschmehl_lists [at] tx> wrote:
> Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything.

good troll.

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Valdis.Kletnieks at vt

Nov 3, 2009, 8:52 PM

Post #5 of 47 (1511 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Tue, 03 Nov 2009 22:13:24 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
> Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything. Furthermore
> every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
> the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
> sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
> your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.

You're new here, aren't you? :)

We're talking here about the FBI, which has had problems with their abuse
of surveillance from J Edgar Hoover's early years up to the recent problems
with abuses of NSLs. And you expect us to believe they'll toe the line
when using this surveillance ability?

Oh, and how much time did J Edgar spend in jail for his illegal wiretaps?
And how much time will anybody spend in jail for the NSL abuses?


kurt.buff at gmail

Nov 3, 2009, 9:50 PM

Post #6 of 47 (1527 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 20:13, Paul Schmehl <pschmehl_lists [at] tx> wrote:
> --On November 4, 2009 12:55:45 PM +1100 "Ivan ." <ivanhec [at] gmail> wrote:
>
>> The answer is both more mundane and more alarming. Prosecutors are
>> using the FBI's massive surveillance system, DCSNet, which stands for
>> Digital Collection System Network. According to Wired magazine, this
>> system connects FBI wiretapping rooms to switches controlled by
>> traditional land-line operators, internet-telephony providers and
>> cellular companies. It can be used to instantly wiretap almost any
>> communications device in the U.S. — wireless or tethered.
>>
>> http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/blog/archives/2009/10/how_prosecutors.h
>> tml;jsessionid=ABTR4HPERGBDFQE1GHPCKHWATMY32JVN
>>
>
> Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything.

Really? Do tell. Hope your sarcasm meter is pegged here.

> Furthermore
> every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
> the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
> sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
> your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.

Except when it doesn't.

> But other than that, it's really troubling....

As it should be. I don't trust Feds as far as I can spit when it comes
to this sort of stuff.

Kurt

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pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 10:28 AM

Post #7 of 47 (1503 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On Tuesday, November 03, 2009 22:39:06 -0600 Holt Sorenson <hso [at] nosneros>
wrote:

>
> On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 10:13:24PM -0600, Paul Schmehl wrote:
>> Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything. Furthermore
>> every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
>> the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
>> sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
>> your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.
>>
>> But other than that, it's really troubling....
>
> um, have you been off planet for the last 8 years or something?
> http://bit.ly/Cpwam
> http://bit.ly/2AMX6O
> http://bit.ly/guIGS
> http://bit.ly/vKLgB
> http://bit.ly/L6xP7
> http://bit.ly/18chv
>

No. But I can distinguish between an American citizen and someone living in
America who may be involved in terrorist activity. And so can the courts.

Can you?

--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
*******************************************
"It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead." Thomas Jefferson

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 10:30 AM

Post #8 of 47 (1499 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On Tuesday, November 03, 2009 22:52:28 -0600 Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote:

> On Tue, 03 Nov 2009 22:13:24 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
>> Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything. Furthermore
>> every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by evidence that justifies
>> the warrant and signed by a federal judge who agrees that there is
>> sufficient cause for the wiretap, and illegal wiretaps will not only get
>> your case thrown out of court but your butt thrown in jail as well.
>
> You're new here, aren't you? :)
>
> We're talking here about the FBI, which has had problems with their abuse
> of surveillance from J Edgar Hoover's early years up to the recent problems
> with abuses of NSLs. And you expect us to believe they'll toe the line
> when using this surveillance ability?
>

No, nor did I state that. I said that illegal wiretapping will get thrown out
of court and the perpetrators jailed. That's a separate issue from whether or
not agents will all act within the law.

> Oh, and how much time did J Edgar spend in jail for his illegal wiretaps?
> And how much time will anybody spend in jail for the NSL abuses?

Depends on whether anyone decides to prosecute.

--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
*******************************************
"It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead." Thomas Jefferson

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


blsonne at halvdan

Nov 4, 2009, 10:52 AM

Post #9 of 47 (1495 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

> I said that illegal wiretapping will get thrown out
> of court and the perpetrators jailed. That's a separate issue from whether or
> not agents will all act within the law.

Except that illegal wiretapping DOESN'T get thrown out in court for the
most part that I can see, or it gets retroactively made legal.

If we even get to find out it happened in the first place.


--
Byron L. Sonne :: blsonne [at] halvdan :: www.halvdan.com
gpg: 0x69D9EAA6, C651 EF07 1298 58B3 615D 4019 E196 BAE1 69D9 EAA6

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
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Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


gem at rellim

Nov 4, 2009, 10:59 AM

Post #10 of 47 (1505 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Yo Paul!

On Wed, 4 Nov 2009, Paul Schmehl wrote:

> No. But I can distinguish between an American citizen and someone living in
> America who may be involved in terrorist activity. And so can the courts.

I would rather live on your planet, but I am stuck on this one.

If you understand what an NSL is you understnad the courts have no say in it.

RGDS
GARY
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97701
gem [at] rellim Tel:+1(541)382-8588

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_______________________________________________
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Valdis.Kletnieks at vt

Nov 4, 2009, 11:21 AM

Post #11 of 47 (1505 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 12:30:25 CST, Paul Schmehl said:

> No, nor did I state that. I said that illegal wiretapping will get thrown out
> of court and the perpetrators jailed. That's a separate issue from whether or
> not agents will all act within the law.

No, it's the same issue. If the agents were acting within the law, it wouldn't
be an illegal wiretap.

> > Oh, and how much time did J Edgar spend in jail for his illegal wiretaps?
> > And how much time will anybody spend in jail for the NSL abuses?
>
> Depends on whether anyone decides to prosecute.

So "illegal wiretap will get the perpetrators jailed" should read "illegal
wiretap *may* get the perpetrators jailed, depending on the whim of the DA
and the political climate at the time".

J. Edgar Hoover went to jail for the maximum sentence for his illegal
surveillance of a Nobel Peace Prize winner, right?

George W Bush and company went to jail for the maximum sentence for their
self-admittedly illegal surveillance without FISA warrants, right?

Oh, they didn't even get indicted, much less jailed? Yeah. That's what I thought...

"On what planet do you spend most of your time?" -- Barney Frank


pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 12:00 PM

Post #12 of 47 (1505 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On Wednesday, November 04, 2009 12:59:09 -0600 "Gary E. Miller"
<gem [at] rellim> wrote:

>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Yo Paul!
>
> On Wed, 4 Nov 2009, Paul Schmehl wrote:
>
>> No. But I can distinguish between an American citizen and someone living in
>> America who may be involved in terrorist activity. And so can the courts.
>
> I would rather live on your planet, but I am stuck on this one.
>
> If you understand what an NSL is you understnad the courts have no say in it.
>

If you understand what an NSL is then you know that it is applied to an
infinitesimal portion of the US population. And you also understand that it
has to do with *investigation* and not prosecution. If there is to be a
prosecution as a result of an NSL then the courts are indeed involved and get
to decide whether or not the NSL was legal and justified.

That's the world we both live in. There has been much hot air about NSLs, and,
as with any governmental behavior, there have been abuses, but the number of
American citizens who have been wrongly convicted as a result of the
application of an NSL is zero - unless you can show a documented case of the
same - and I'm not referring to the bluster and speculation of the news media.

In a country with a population over 300 million, the chances of an ordinary
citizen being wiretapped without a court order are essentially non-existent.

IOW, as I stated originally, I'm not worried about it. And as the OP implied,
all 300 million of us need to be worried about it. That was the point I was
taking issue with.

It's essentially the same argument as - I don't want system admins to have
access to my data because then they can look at it without my knowledge or
permission (which is true), when sysadmins barely have time to get the work
done much less snoop around in your stuff.

I seriously doubt the FBI will be wiretapping anyone on this list that isn't
doing something illegal.

--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
*******************************************
"It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead." Thomas Jefferson

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 12:08 PM

Post #13 of 47 (1502 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On Wednesday, November 04, 2009 13:21:02 -0600 Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote:
>
> George W Bush and company went to jail for the maximum sentence for their
> self-admittedly illegal surveillance without FISA warrants, right?
>

No one in the Bush administration ever "self-admitted" to illegal surveillance
nor has it ever been proven in court that there *was* any illegal survelliance.
Stop reading the New York Times. There are good arguments for the wiretaps
being illegal, and there are equally good arguments that they were not. Until
it's challenged in court and decided one way or the other, calling the wiretaps
illegal is nothing more than an opinion.

Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone without a
FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't count.

> Oh, they didn't even get indicted, much less jailed? Yeah. That's what I
> thought...
>
> "On what planet do you spend most of your time?" -- Barney Frank

You should worry a lot more about the loss of your freedoms from people like
Barney Frank than you ever should about FBI surveillance.

--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
*******************************************
"It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead." Thomas Jefferson

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


blsonne at halvdan

Nov 4, 2009, 12:10 PM

Post #14 of 47 (1500 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

> I seriously doubt the FBI will be wiretapping anyone on this list that isn't
> doing something illegal.

If you're innocent, you have nothing to fear! Step aside, Citizen.

:(


--
Byron L. Sonne :: blsonne [at] halvdan :: www.halvdan.com
gpg: 0x69D9EAA6, C651 EF07 1298 58B3 615D 4019 E196 BAE1 69D9 EAA6

_______________________________________________
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Valdis.Kletnieks at vt

Nov 4, 2009, 2:36 PM

Post #15 of 47 (1498 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 14:08:59 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone without a
> FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't count.

It's kind of hard to cite a "proven instance", because all the people who
tried were told to stuff it under the "state secrets" strategy:

http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/99D0C2963ED15AB288257394007C1F36/$file/0636083.pdf?openelement

I suppose a signed letter from the Attorney General saying "We won't do
this anymore because we now have a valid FISA warrant" isn't an admission
that the program *had* been doing it before.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/politics/20060117gonzales_Letter.pdf

And apparently, it *was* done, because:

"Q General Hayden, I know you're not going to talk about specifics about that,
and you say it's been successful. But would it have been as successful -- can
you unequivocally say that something has been stopped or there was an imminent
attack or you got information through this that you could not have gotten
through going to the court?

GENERAL HAYDEN: I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got
information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.

Q Through the court? Because of the speed that you got it?

GENERAL HAYDEN: Yes, because of the speed, because of the procedures, because
of the processes and requirements set up in the FISA process, I can say
unequivocally that we have used this program in lieu of that and this program
has been successful."

http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2005/12/print/20051219-1.html

So there you have it - the Attorney General and the Deputy Director of National
Intelligence saying flat out "We did this surveillance without a FISA warrant".

But I suppose they were both lying through their teeth, and it never happened,
and all this stuff on official White House letterhead is forged, and none of
them said it.


pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 3:42 PM

Post #16 of 47 (1501 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On Wednesday, November 04, 2009 16:36:12 -0600 Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote:

> On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 14:08:59 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
>> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone
>> without a FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't count.
>
> It's kind of hard to cite a "proven instance", because all the people who
> tried were told to stuff it under the "state secrets" strategy:
>
> http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/99D0C2963ED15AB288257394007C1
> F36/$file/0636083.pdf?openelement
>
> I suppose a signed letter from the Attorney General saying "We won't do
> this anymore because we now have a valid FISA warrant" isn't an admission
> that the program *had* been doing it before.
>
> http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/politics/20060117gonzales_Letter.pdf
>
> And apparently, it *was* done, because:
>
> "Q General Hayden, I know you're not going to talk about specifics about that,
> and you say it's been successful. But would it have been as successful -- can
> you unequivocally say that something has been stopped or there was an imminent
> attack or you got information through this that you could not have gotten
> through going to the court?
>
> GENERAL HAYDEN: I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got
> information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.
>
> Q Through the court? Because of the speed that you got it?
>
> GENERAL HAYDEN: Yes, because of the speed, because of the procedures, because
> of the processes and requirements set up in the FISA process, I can say
> unequivocally that we have used this program in lieu of that and this program
> has been successful."
>
> http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2005/12/print/200512
> 19-1.html
>
> So there you have it - the Attorney General and the Deputy Director of
> National Intelligence saying flat out "We did this surveillance without a
> FISA warrant".
>
> But I suppose they were both lying through their teeth, and it never happened,
> and all this stuff on official White House letterhead is forged, and none of
> them said it.
>

No, they weren't lying through their teeth. But you and millions of other
people fail to grasp what they're saying. The NSA is a *military* agency.
It's charter allows it to do *military* surveillance. The courts have always
and routinely exempted that type of surveillance from the requirement of
obtaining a warrant because it does not involve criminal justice actions
against US citizens. It involves surveillance of "foreign agents" (the legal
term of art for spies) - persons working on behalf of the enemies of the US.

You and millions of others love to conflate those issues with warrantless
surveillance of US citizens for the purpose of obtaining evidence in a criminal
investigation and then scream bloody murder about warrantless surveillance and
intrusions of our rights.

The latter is prohibited by law. The former is permitted by law. The purpose
of the FISA law was to curtail the type of activity that the Nixon
administration engaged in, namely the warrantless surveillance of US citizens
for the purposes of obtaining evidence in a criminal investigation under the
color of "national security", a perversion of the intent of the Constitution.

The courts have ruled that the primary purpose of the surveillance must be to
"spy" on foreign enemies *and* their contacts within our borders. So long as
it complies with those strictures it is legal without a warrant, according to
every court ruling that has ever been obtained on the matter. When it involves
a party within the US, a FISA warrant is required. When it does not involve a
party within the borders of the US, **even if it involves a US citizen (see
Hamadi), no warrant is required (FISA or otherwise) nor has one ever been
required.

And if you gave more than a second to the topic, you would readily see the
stupidity of requiring the military to obtain a warrant to surveil the enemy in
a time of war.

The NSA is not a law enforcement agency and cannot pursue legal action against
US citizens. That's the FBI's role. There are laws that address what, if any,
information that the NSA obtains may be turned over to the FBI.

You do realize that General Hayden was the director of the NSA when he made
those statements, right? And he was referring to a surveillance program that
involved enemies of the US, even some of whom are US citizens?

That's a far cry from oh gee, they can snoop on my conversations any time they
want to without going to the court first.

--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not those of my employer.
*******************************************
"It is as useless to argue with those who have
renounced the use of reason as to administer
medication to the dead." Thomas Jefferson

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/


mrx at propergander

Nov 4, 2009, 5:21 PM

Post #17 of 47 (1496 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Paul Schmehl wrote:
> --On Wednesday, November 04, 2009 16:36:12 -0600 Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 14:08:59 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
>>> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone
>>> without a FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't count.
>> It's kind of hard to cite a "proven instance", because all the people who
>> tried were told to stuff it under the "state secrets" strategy:
>>
>> http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf/99D0C2963ED15AB288257394007C1
>> F36/$file/0636083.pdf?openelement
>>
>> I suppose a signed letter from the Attorney General saying "We won't do
>> this anymore because we now have a valid FISA warrant" isn't an admission
>> that the program *had* been doing it before.
>>
>> http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/politics/20060117gonzales_Letter.pdf
>>
>> And apparently, it *was* done, because:
>>
>> "Q General Hayden, I know you're not going to talk about specifics about that,
>> and you say it's been successful. But would it have been as successful -- can
>> you unequivocally say that something has been stopped or there was an imminent
>> attack or you got information through this that you could not have gotten
>> through going to the court?
>>
>> GENERAL HAYDEN: I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got
>> information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.
>>
>> Q Through the court? Because of the speed that you got it?
>>
>> GENERAL HAYDEN: Yes, because of the speed, because of the procedures, because
>> of the processes and requirements set up in the FISA process, I can say
>> unequivocally that we have used this program in lieu of that and this program
>> has been successful."
>>
>> http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2005/12/print/200512
>> 19-1.html
>>
>> So there you have it - the Attorney General and the Deputy Director of
>> National Intelligence saying flat out "We did this surveillance without a
>> FISA warrant".
>>
>> But I suppose they were both lying through their teeth, and it never happened,
>> and all this stuff on official White House letterhead is forged, and none of
>> them said it.
>>
>
> No, they weren't lying through their teeth. But you and millions of other
> people fail to grasp what they're saying. The NSA is a *military* agency.
> It's charter allows it to do *military* surveillance. The courts have always
> and routinely exempted that type of surveillance from the requirement of
> obtaining a warrant because it does not involve criminal justice actions
> against US citizens. It involves surveillance of "foreign agents" (the legal
> term of art for spies) - persons working on behalf of the enemies of the US.
>
> You and millions of others love to conflate those issues with warrantless
> surveillance of US citizens for the purpose of obtaining evidence in a criminal
> investigation and then scream bloody murder about warrantless surveillance and
> intrusions of our rights.
>
> The latter is prohibited by law. The former is permitted by law. The purpose
> of the FISA law was to curtail the type of activity that the Nixon
> administration engaged in, namely the warrantless surveillance of US citizens
> for the purposes of obtaining evidence in a criminal investigation under the
> color of "national security", a perversion of the intent of the Constitution.
>
> The courts have ruled that the primary purpose of the surveillance must be to
> "spy" on foreign enemies *and* their contacts within our borders. So long as
> it complies with those strictures it is legal without a warrant, according to
> every court ruling that has ever been obtained on the matter. When it involves
> a party within the US, a FISA warrant is required. When it does not involve a
> party within the borders of the US, **even if it involves a US citizen (see
> Hamadi), no warrant is required (FISA or otherwise) nor has one ever been
> required.
>
> And if you gave more than a second to the topic, you would readily see the
> stupidity of requiring the military to obtain a warrant to surveil the enemy in
> a time of war.
>
> The NSA is not a law enforcement agency and cannot pursue legal action against
> US citizens. That's the FBI's role. There are laws that address what, if any,
> information that the NSA obtains may be turned over to the FBI.
>
> You do realize that General Hayden was the director of the NSA when he made
> those statements, right? And he was referring to a surveillance program that
> involved enemies of the US, even some of whom are US citizens?
>
> That's a far cry from oh gee, they can snoop on my conversations any time they
> want to without going to the court first.
>
This snooping on US citizens via illegal wire taps could be tested. Appear to plan a terrorist outrage, engage in telephone conversations
regarding the planting of bombs in shopping malls or the detonation of a fuel tanker at a large sports event. Then sit back an wait for the FBI,
CIA or other law enforcement agency to kick in your door. Of course it could be that monitoring systems currently in place are
searching/listening for certain keywords and once flagged a warrant is then applied for. But whatever the case, if an armed response team kick
down your door at 4:00am, you can be sure your telephone conversations were monitored.

I am personally of the opinion that the law only applies to those that are caught if they are a criminal, and cannot be covered up if they are a
law enforcement officer.

regards
mrx.
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gem at rellim

Nov 4, 2009, 6:03 PM

Post #18 of 47 (1491 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Yo Paul!

On Wed, 4 Nov 2009, Paul Schmehl wrote:

> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone without a
> FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't count.

Jewel v. NSA

RGDS
GARY
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97701
gem [at] rellim Tel:+1(541)382-8588

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Valdis.Kletnieks at vt

Nov 4, 2009, 6:48 PM

Post #19 of 47 (1489 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 17:42:37 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
> You and millions of others love to conflate those issues with warrantless
> surveillance of US citizens for the purpose of obtaining evidence in a criminal
> investigation and then scream bloody murder about warrantless surveillance and
> intrusions of our rights.

OK, so in your opinion we should sit back and accept the legal theory that "I'm
the President, and as Commander in Chief I can give orders contrary to the
usual 4th Amendment restrictions" (note carefully that there was *NOT* an
actual formal declaration of war made - Congress merely authorized the use of
force. Many constitutional law experts seem to think this makes a difference).

So it is OK if as President, he decides to suspend habeus corpus?

If it's *not* OK, how do you intend to complain once your corpus can't
be habeased any more?

"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance" -- Thomas Jefferson.

In other words, the time to raise a fuss is *before* they go down the
slippery slope, not once they're 3/4 of the way down and in an uncontrolled
slide.

"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in a flag and carrying a
cross." -- Sinclair Lewis, 1935

And that's why we raise a fuss. You may wish to read Naomi Wolf's "Fascist
America in 10 easy steps":

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/apr/24/usa.comment

And that's why we raise a fuss.


ivanhec at gmail

Nov 4, 2009, 7:04 PM

Post #20 of 47 (1491 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WourPs56Shc

On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 1:48 PM, <Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt> wrote:

> On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 17:42:37 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
> > You and millions of others love to conflate those issues with warrantless
> > surveillance of US citizens for the purpose of obtaining evidence in a
> criminal
> > investigation and then scream bloody murder about warrantless
> surveillance and
> > intrusions of our rights.
>
> OK, so in your opinion we should sit back and accept the legal theory that
> "I'm
> the President, and as Commander in Chief I can give orders contrary to the
> usual 4th Amendment restrictions" (note carefully that there was *NOT* an
> actual formal declaration of war made - Congress merely authorized the use
> of
> force. Many constitutional law experts seem to think this makes a
> difference).
>
> So it is OK if as President, he decides to suspend habeus corpus?
>
> If it's *not* OK, how do you intend to complain once your corpus can't
> be habeased any more?
>
> "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance" -- Thomas Jefferson.
>
> In other words, the time to raise a fuss is *before* they go down the
> slippery slope, not once they're 3/4 of the way down and in an uncontrolled
> slide.
>
> "When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in a flag and carrying a
> cross." -- Sinclair Lewis, 1935
>
> And that's why we raise a fuss. You may wish to read Naomi Wolf's "Fascist
> America in 10 easy steps":
>
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/apr/24/usa.comment
>
> And that's why we raise a fuss.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
> Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
> Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
>


pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 7:17 PM

Post #21 of 47 (1496 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On November 4, 2009 8:48:41 PM -0600 Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt wrote:

> On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 17:42:37 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
>> You and millions of others love to conflate those issues with
>> warrantless surveillance of US citizens for the purpose of obtaining
>> evidence in a criminal investigation and then scream bloody murder
>> about warrantless surveillance and intrusions of our rights.
>
> OK, so in your opinion we should sit back and accept the legal theory
> that "I'm the President, and as Commander in Chief I can give orders
> contrary to the usual 4th Amendment restrictions" (note carefully that
> there was *NOT* an actual formal declaration of war made - Congress
> merely authorized the use of force. Many constitutional law experts seem
> to think this makes a difference).

The President doesn't need a declaration of war to conduct surveillance on
the enemies of the US, and foreign agents do not have any 4th amendment
rights. Only US citizens do. Your argument is akin to the stupidity that
insists that terrorists held in Guantanmo Bay have a Constitutional right
to counsel, a day in court, etc., etc., ad nauseum, ad infinitum. The
rest of the world laughs at such idiocy (not to mention never practices
it.)

>
> So it is OK if as President, he decides to suspend habeus corpus?
>

Foreign agents don't have Constitutional rights. (Maybe if I repeat this
enough it will sink in.)

> If it's *not* OK, how do you intend to complain once your corpus can't
> be habeased any more?
>
> "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance" -- Thomas Jefferson.
>

Eternal vigilance includes voting, taking the time to understand the
issues and your rights, and having enough good sense to realize that US
Constitutional rights do not apply to non-citizens. Unless you can
produce a single example of a US citizen who was charged with, indicted
and convicted of a crime based upon so-called illegal surveillance, your
argument is nothing more than hyperventilation over boogy men. Have the
black helicopters come yet?

> In other words, the time to raise a fuss is *before* they go down the
> slippery slope, not once they're 3/4 of the way down and in an
> uncontrolled slide.
>
> "When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in a flag and
> carrying a cross." -- Sinclair Lewis, 1935
>

Well Marxism has come to America and millions are marching willingly into
slavery. The very idea that the government can force you to buy insurance
is so anathema to the Constitution that it's stunning anyone would
consider it, much less listen to Congresspersons stutter and stammer when
asked where in the Constitution the government is given the right to force
US citizens to buy anything.

Sinclair Lewis would approve, of course, because he too was a Marxist.
Marxists *want* people to be enslaved to the government.

> And that's why we raise a fuss. You may wish to read Naomi Wolf's
> "Fascist America in 10 easy steps":
>
> http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/apr/24/usa.comment
>
> And that's why we raise a fuss.

Mostly "we" raise a fuss because "we" are profoundly ignorant.

Paul Schmehl, If it isn't already
obvious, my opinions are my own
and not those of my employer.
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pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 4, 2009, 7:19 PM

Post #22 of 47 (1494 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On November 4, 2009 8:03:10 PM -0600 "Gary E. Miller" <gem [at] rellim>
wrote:

>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Yo Paul!
>
> On Wed, 4 Nov 2009, Paul Schmehl wrote:
>
>> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone
>> without a FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't
>> count.
>
> Jewel v. NSA
>

Yo Gary. Look up alleged in a dictionary. You won't find the word proven
there.

I could sue the government for hiding space men at Area 51. Until I can
produce the evidence, it's vapor.

Paul Schmehl, If it isn't already
obvious, my opinions are my own
and not those of my employer.
******************************************
WARNING: Check the headers before replying

_______________________________________________
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r0ck at operamail

Nov 5, 2009, 7:12 PM

Post #23 of 47 (1449 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Paul Schmehl" <pschmehl_lists [at] tx>
> To: "full-disclosure" <full-disclosure [at] lists>
> Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street
> Date: Wed, 04 Nov 2009 21:19:29 -0600
>
>
> --On November 4, 2009 8:03:10 PM -0600 "Gary E. Miller" <gem [at] rellim>
> wrote:
>
> >
> > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > Yo Paul!
> >
> > On Wed, 4 Nov 2009, Paul Schmehl wrote:
> >
> >> Please cite one proven instance where surveillance was done on anyone
> >> without a FISA warrant - and lefty blogs filled with hyperbole don't
> >> count.
> >
> > Jewel v. NSA
> >
>
> Yo Gary. Look up alleged in a dictionary. You won't find the word proven
> there.
>
> I could sue the government for hiding space men at Area 51. Until I can
> produce the evidence, it's vapor.

and someone could sue you for burying your head up your ass. Fortunately, we have this list as proof.

Getting back on topic, it is well-known, and proven, that the NSA has surveillence facilities inside
several U.S. telecom carriers. You need only look inside one of AT&T's PoPs in San Francisco for proof.

Yes, the NSA might target non-citizens, however, without oversight, who is to know? Don't mention FISA judges either.
They have become a rubber stamp for wiretap requests with an approval rate of well over 99.99%.

The same applies to the NSLs issued by the FBI. Not only are targets not permitted to talk about such NSLs, but they can't
even acknowledge the existance of such NSLs.

And yet, here you are asking for the very proof that cannot be provided.

The only question I have for you is...

Which government agency is paying your mortgage?







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r0ck at operamail

Nov 5, 2009, 7:13 PM

Post #24 of 47 (1449 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

Why is it that Valdis has something to say about everything?

I see you on NANOG, full-disclosure, outages, and more.

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Valdis.Kletnieks [at] vt
> To: "Paul Schmehl" <pschmehl_lists [at] tx>
> Cc: "full-disclosure" <full-disclosure [at] lists>
> Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street
> Date: Tue, 03 Nov 2009 23:52:28 -0500
>
>
> On Tue, 03 Nov 2009 22:13:24 CST, Paul Schmehl said:
> > Of course, without a warrant they can't wiretap anything.
> > Furthermore every warrant to wiretap has to be accompanied by
> > evidence that justifies the warrant and signed by a federal judge
> > who agrees that there is sufficient cause for the wiretap, and
> > illegal wiretaps will not only get your case thrown out of court
> > but your butt thrown in jail as well.
>
> You're new here, aren't you? :)
>
> We're talking here about the FBI, which has had problems with their abuse
> of surveillance from J Edgar Hoover's early years up to the recent problems
> with abuses of NSLs. And you expect us to believe they'll toe the line
> when using this surveillance ability?
>
> Oh, and how much time did J Edgar spend in jail for his illegal wiretaps?
> And how much time will anybody spend in jail for the NSL abuses?
> << 1.2.dat >>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
> Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html
> Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/

>







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pschmehl_lists at tx

Nov 5, 2009, 7:47 PM

Post #25 of 47 (1441 views)
Permalink
Re: How Prosecutors Wiretap Wall Street [In reply to]

--On November 5, 2009 9:12:29 PM -0600 Chris <r0ck [at] operamail> wrote:
>
>
> and someone could sue you for burying your head up your ass.
> Fortunately, we have this list as proof.
>

Oh my, aren't we clever.

> Getting back on topic, it is well-known, and proven, that the NSA has
> surveillence facilities inside several U.S. telecom carriers. You need
> only look inside one of AT&T's PoPs in San Francisco for proof.
>

You know this to be true because you've looked for yourself, right? You
didn't just take the world of a complete stranger quoted by a compliant
press at face value, did you?

> Yes, the NSA might target non-citizens, however, without oversight, who
> is to know? Don't mention FISA judges either. They have become a rubber
> stamp for wiretap requests with an approval rate of well over 99.99%.
>

Sure, because we all know those rat bastards at the NSA and all those
federal judges don't give a shit about the USA or freedom or personal
rights.

When you forget that the people who work in government are just like you,
trying to make a living and do the best they can, it's easy to
depersonalize them and demonize them as if they're all blackhearted evil
turds. Easy, that is, if you don't have much of a brain.

> The same applies to the NSLs issued by the FBI. Not only are targets
> not permitted to talk about such NSLs, but they can't even acknowledge
> the existance of such NSLs.
>
> And yet, here you are asking for the very proof that cannot be provided.
>

That's hilarious. The surveillance program didn't even survive for four
years after 9/11 before someone inside the NSA "blew the whistle" on the
program. Of course, even though they were working for those evil bastards
somehow their altruism got the better of them and they revealed "the
truth" about the program, despite the fact that they had sworn an oath to
keep it a secret. (And I'm sure they didn't get a dime for blabbing
either!)

And of course Congress knew nothing about it, even though they had been
briefed about it dozens of times and never raised a single objection.

Then of course, once the program had been "revealed" publicly, all those
altruistic politicians immediately began investigating because they care
so deeply about your privacy and your personal freedoms. And then all the
privacy experts, motivated by the purest of concerns, your personal
privacy and freedoms, immediately sprung into action to protect you
because they all care so deeply for you personally.

Or maybe, just maybe, there was the ever-so-slightest twinge of politics
involved.

Of course we all know that Joe Wilson told the truth and George Bush lied.
That should be obvious to any rational person, right?

But we'll never know for sure if the "whistleblowers" were motivated by
something other than altruism, because you're so deeply concerned about
your personal privacy and freedom that it would never even occur to you to
question the motives of anyone who agrees with your view of the world.

The fact that you believe that only those who violate their oath of office
are honest and only those who never violate their oath of office are
dishonest blinds you to the possibility that the truth lies somewhere in
between. It's OK though. So long as you don't apply that standard to
your investments, you'll probably be able to retire OK.

> The only question I have for you is...
>
> Which government agency is paying your mortgage?

The same one that is proposing to pay for your healthcare and control
every other aspect of your life because you're too blind to see the forest
for the trees. You and millions of other blithering idiots who see
nothing wrong with the government forcing you to buy insurance but
everything wrong with them trying to keep terrorists from blowing your
worthless ass up.

Paul Schmehl, If it isn't already
obvious, my opinions are my own
and not those of my employer.
******************************************
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