1 Comment

  1. The Tennessee ConserVOLiance March 10, 2008 @ 8:58 am

    […] Collar Muse on an interesting piece of correspondence that crossed my desk. It was a notice that 25 Attorneys General across the country, in a bi-partisan effort, had signed a letter urging the leader…. Despite being overwhelmingly supported in the Senate and with enough votes to pass in the House if […]

Where Does Tennessee’s AG Stand on FISA …

Blogroll, Geopolitics, Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Politics, Tennesee Tips, War on Terror

Cross-Posted from The Tennessee ConserVOLiance.

[UPDATE 3/5/8 @ 13:10] - I spoke to AG Cooper’s office a few moments ago and was informed that General Cooper is not in town today. The lady I spoke with helpfully gave me General Cooper’s email address and connected me to his voice mail. I’ve left him a message and am sending him a link to the post so that he may respond. It will be at least tomorrow, however, before he does. ~Blue

The House Republican Conference released a statement detailing that on March 4th, the Attorneys General of 25 states issued a bi-partisan appeal to Nancy Pelosi and the House of Representatives to pass the FISA bill a bipartisan US Senate vote sent them over two weeks ago. The text of the letter, signed by 16 Republicans and 9 Democrats reads:

We urge the House of Representatives to schedule a vote and pass S. 2248, the FISA Amendments Act of 2007. This bipartisan legislation is critical to the national security of the United States. Once passed, S. 2248 will ensure intelligence officials have the ability to collect vitally important information about foreign terrorists operating overseas.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller (D-WV) authored S. 2248 to solve a critical problem that arose when the Protect America Act was allowed to lapse on February 16, 2008. The root of the problem stems from a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (”FISA”) Court order that jeopardizes America’s national security efforts. Under that decision, U.S. intelligence agencies must obtain a FISA warrant before initiating surveillance involving suspected foreign terrorists located outside the United States.

The FISA Court’s decision hinged on the fact that those entirely foreign communications are frequently routed through telecommunications facilities that happen to be located in the United States. Because modern global communications networks routinely route data through numerous facilities in a myriad of countries, the nation in which the call originates may be completely unrelated to the nation through which that call is ultimately routed.

A bipartisan majority of the United States Senate recently approved S. 2248. But until it is also passed by the House of Representatives, intelligence officials must obtain FISA warrants every time they attempt to monitor suspected terrorists in overseas countries. Passing S. 2248 would ensure our intelligence experts are once again able to conduct real-time surveillance. As you know, prompt access to intelligence data is critical to the ongoing safety and security of our nation.

As Attorneys General, we are our states’ chief law enforcement officials and therefore responsible for taking whatever action is necessary to keep our citizens safe. With S. 2248 still pending in the House of Representatives, our national security is in jeopardy. We therefore urge the House of Representatives to schedule a vote and pass the FISA Amendments Act of 2007.

Tennessee’s Attorney General, Robert E. Cooper, Jr. was not among the signers. I have no idea why.

So I decided to email and ask him. Wouldn’t you know it, he doesn’t have an email address. The chief law enforcement officer for the State of Tennessee and all he lists is a phone number. I’ll call him a little later this morning and let you know what he says.

Blue

Popularity: 90% [?]

Blue Collar Muse @ March 6, 2008

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>


Comments links could be nofollow free.
Clicky Web Analytics