Project for Privacy and Surveillance Accountability (PPSA)
  • Issues
  • Solutions
  • SCORECARD
    • Congressional Scorecard Rubric
  • News
  • About
  • TAKE ACTION
    • Section 702 Reform
    • PRESS Act
    • DONATE
  • Issues
  • Solutions
  • SCORECARD
    • Congressional Scorecard Rubric
  • News
  • About
  • TAKE ACTION
    • Section 702 Reform
    • PRESS Act
    • DONATE

 NEWS & UPDATES

Warrants and the “Wild West” of Digital Surveillance

4/21/2025

 

Rep. Knott: “It’s Amazing to Me That There’s So Much Resistance to the Warrant Requirement”

Picture
​Perhaps you had other things to do during last week’s House Judiciary hearing, “A Continued Pattern of Government Surveillance of U.S. Citizens.” So here’s a summary: The Judiciary’s Subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government Surveillance brought together witnesses from across the political spectrum (including PPSA’s own Gene Schaerr) to identify potential solutions to the ongoing (and growing) problem of Fourth Amendment abuse by government entities.
 
At the heart of the discussion was the need to import probable cause warrants – the key requirement of the Constitution’s Fourth Amendment – to the practice of federal agencies freely accessing our international communications, as well as our personal, digital data.
 
Witnesses effectively rebutted the fearmongering campaign by the intelligence community to convince us that a warrant requirement for federal surveillance of American citizens is too onerous, and too dangerous to entertain. But the most effective remarks came from a Member of the committee.
 
Rep. Brad Knott (R-NC), a former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, addressed the issue of warrant requirements with the assurance of a former federal prosecutor. He spoke of what it took for him to get permission to “flip the switch” on some of the most “intrusive” forms of wiretapping American citizens.
 
“So you have to demonstrate necessity,” Rep. Knott said. “You have to demonstrate why other techniques are futile … the rigor we had to exercise was very important … it kept the internal investigators accountable.”
 
Rep. Knott said the warrant process made sure investigations were “open and honest.” Investigators knew “that their actions were going to be subject to pen and paper. They were going to be subject to judicial review … and opposing counsel.”
 
Given the clarity and accountability added by warrants, Rep. Knott added:
 
“It’s amazing to me that there’s so much resistance to the warrant requirement alone.”
 
Throughout the 90-minute hearing, Members and witnesses stressed one thing:
 
The countdown clock is ticking on what may be our last, best chance at meaningful reform – including the adoption of a warrant requirement for U.S. citizens when Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) comes up for renewal next year (it’s due to sunset in April 2026).
 
Section 702 is the legal authority that allows federal intelligence agencies to spy on foreign targets on foreign soil. But it also “incidentally” picks up the international communications of Americans, which can then be warrantlessly inspected by the FBI and other agencies.
 
Section 702 got a lot of airtime at the hearing and was frequently linked with the words “loophole” and “backdoor.” The Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act (RISAA) of 2024 attempted to fix Section 702 – and did add some useful reforms – but it also left a loophole in which the FBI and others attempt to justify warrantless backdoor searches on Americans’ private communications.
 
For the FBI in particular, this has become the go-to means to warrantlessly develop domestic leads.
 
“Three million times they did [backdoor searches] in 2021,” lamented Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH). Or, as James Czerniawski of Americans for Progress, put it: “Time and time again we have caught the intelligence community with their hand in the constitutional cookie jar.”
 
Members and witnesses alike also addressed a privacy crisis even greater than Section 702 – the routine purchases made by federal agencies of Americans’ private digital information from data brokers.
 
ACLU’s Kia Hamadanchy reminded the subcommittee that the kind of data that can be bought and sold would be, in the words of a former CIA deputy director, “top secret” sensitive if gathered by traditional intelligence means. It would have to be kept “in a safe,” not in a database.
 
The hearing also got at what many consider the underlying issue driving the new era of surveillance. Namely, the acknowledgment that we increasingly live not in one world, but two – our physical reality and its digital twin. But unlike our world, the laws governing how the Fourth Amendment should be applied in the digital context are largely unwritten. In other words, said Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), it’s the “Wild West.”
 
And Ranking Member Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) added, “New technologies make it a lot harder to reign in government intrusion in the lives of the people.” The unwitting result? “We live in a modern, albeit consensual, surveillance state,” declared Phil Kiko, principal at Williams & Jensen and former Judiciary counsel.
 
With any luck, things might be different a year from now when FISA is up for renewal, thanks to a U.S. District Court ruling in January.
 
“To countenance this practice,” of warrantless surveillance, wrote the court, “would convert Section 702 into … a tool for law enforcement to run ‘backdoor searches’ that circumvent the Fourth Amendment.”
 
That legal precedent didn’t exist when the last Congress debated FISA reforms. Emboldened by this landmark decision, Reps. Jordan and Raskin are pledging to once again work together in a bipartisan spirit to win this fight. Their continuing partnership captures the spirit of the subcommittee’s hearing and should give reformers a renewed sense of hope.

    STAY UP TO DATE

Subscribe to Newsletter
DONATE & HELP US PROTECT YOUR PRIVACY RIGHTS

Comments are closed.

    Categories

    All
    2022 Year In Review
    2023 Year In Review
    2024 Year In Review
    Analysis
    Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    Call To Action
    Congress
    Congressional Hearings
    Congressional Unmasking
    Court Appeals
    Court Hearings
    Court Rulings
    Digital Privacy
    Domestic Surveillance
    Facial Recognition
    FISA
    FISA Reform
    FOIA Requests
    Foreign Surveillance
    Fourth Amendment
    Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act
    Government Surveillance
    Government Surveillance Reform Act (GSRA)
    Insights
    In The Media
    Lawsuits
    Legal
    Legislation
    Letters To Congress
    NDO Fairness Act
    News
    Opinion
    Podcast
    PPSA Amicus Briefs
    Private Data Brokers
    Protect Liberty Act (PLEWSA)
    Saving Privacy Act
    SCOTUS
    SCOTUS Rulings
    Section 702
    Spyware
    Stingrays
    Surveillance Issues
    Surveillance Technology
    The GSRA
    The SAFE Act
    Warrantless Searches
    Watching The Watchers

    RSS Feed

FOLLOW PPSA: 
© COPYRIGHT 2024. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. | PRIVACY STATEMENT
Photo from coffee-rank