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Sam Sacks - page 56

Sam Sacks has 859 articles published.

Spy Hawks See An Opening In Final Week Prior To Section 215 Shutdown

Some of the NSA’s most reliable defenders in the Senate are working to undermine and reverse a White House-backed reform bill, with the expiration of key surveillance authorities imminent. Vocal and powerful Republicans and Democrats who resist even the slightest of changes to dragnet domestic surveillance are pushing back on that tepid legislation, and seeking to grant the NSA a shock victory and additional authorities. Even before the reform bill, the USA Freedom Act, was narrowly defeated in the early morning hours last Saturday, the… Keep Reading

Sen. Orrin Hatch Is Opposed To T.P.P.—He Just Doesn’t Realize It

One of the main arguments leveled against the Trans Pacific Partnership is that it could weaken domestic safeguards for workers and the environment through international dispute settlements. By allowing international courts, open only to investors’ complaints, to penalize governments for passing regulations deemed out of compliance with the deal, critics warn the TPP will undermine important oversight functions and national sovereignty. Which is why it was odd that one of the biggest supporters of the TPP, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), made the exact same argument… Keep Reading

FBI Use of Patriot Act Section 215 Bulk Collection “Continues to Expand”

A Department of Justice watchdog report shows that the FBI’s bulk collection of personal information goes far beyond Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court-approved telephone metadata record-keeping, and includes “gigabytes” of internet communication data and other business records associated with individuals, including Americans, who are not the subject of criminal investigations. The bureau is using the soon-to-be expiring Section 215 of the Patriot Act to collect material ranging from “hard copy productions of business ledgers and receipts to gigabytes of metadata and other electronic information,” according to… Keep Reading

McConnell Bid For Clean PATRIOT Act Reauthorization Likely Delayed By Rand Paul “Filibuster”

UPDATE: The headline of this article was changed on Thursday, following news that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) filed cloture on both the USA Freedom Act and a short-term “clean” reauthorization of expiring Patriot Act surveillance authorities (despite Sen. Paul’s “filibuster”). That sets up a Saturday vote on both measures. Original story continues below…   With the expiration of key surveillance authorities imminent, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) burned up crucial legislative time on Wednesday after he promised to speak from the floor of the Senate “until he can no longer… Keep Reading

Senator Fears Rupert Murdoch Will Hack Into Police Body Cams

Although they have been hailed as a crucial salve needed to heal wounded relations between police and their communities, rules that would force cops to wear body cameras could open up a host of new privacy concerns. Especially, one senator warned on Tuesday, considering that a major media mogul appears to have allegedly gotten away with overseeing a major conspiracy to illegally access sensitive personal information. During a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing Tuesday on the issue, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse spoke to the “hackability” of the… Keep Reading

NSA Reformer Promises To Open A New Front In Surveillance Battle

One of the authors of a key piece of NSA reform sympathized with certain critics of the legislation on Tuesday, and admitted that the bill doesn’t address key areas of surveillance abuse. Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) pledged, however, that that reformers would try to fix some of the bill’s shortcomings next month using the power of the purse. “There’s some criticisms of the USA Freedom Act that it doesn’t go far enough—criticisms that’s I’d agree with,” Rep. Nadler (D-N.Y.) said Tuesday morning, on CSPAN’s Washington… Keep Reading

Obama Takes Bayonets Away From Cops

In a bid to foster trust between communities and local police departments, the White House said Monday that it is restricting the flow of certain types of military hardware from the Pentagon to state and local governments. The administration announced that tracked armored vehicles, weaponized aircraft, greater-than .50-caliber ammunition, grenade launchers, bayonets, and camouflaged uniforms will stop being granted, from federal department to cops around the country. Equipment transfer programs run out of the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security, and Defense were put under review… Keep Reading

FBI Busts US Citizen Who Fought In Syria For Lying About A Bad Tweet

An Iraqi-American who fought in the Syrian civil war was arrested in Texas on Thursday–not for any crimes related to his past militancy, but for actions related to his posting online of what federal agents described as “an oath to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIL.” The feds are alleging that Bilal Abood lied to investigators when he told them that he had never swore fealty to the head of the Islamic State. While Abood acknowledged to agents that he knew it was a crime to lie… Keep Reading

Bernie Still Can’t Get Respect From Democratic Leadership

In an interview that aired on Friday, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid seemed to forget that his colleague and caucus member, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), is running for President, commenting that Hillary Clinton “has a clear field” to the nomination. “Right now we have Hillary Clinton. And that’s it. There’s not another Barack Obama out there. There are no all-stars out there,” Reid told MSNBC anchor Jose Diaz-Balart, according to an interview transcript reported on by The Hill. Reid added that he’s “glad” that Clinton… Keep Reading

Government Watchdog: Afghan Military “Will Need Our Help For The Foreseeable Future”

A top federal watchdog on Wednesday delivered an extensive speech on the dour outlook for Afghanistan’s ability to govern itself in the medium term. Appearing at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) John Sopko stated that “Afghan self-sustainment of its security institutions is long way away … the ANDSF [Afghan National Defense and Security Forces] will need our help for the foreseeable future.” Read more of this article at The Intercept Keep Reading

Congressional Dysfunction An Asset to Hardline NSA Reformers

With the House and Senate at odds over what to do with expiring surveillance authorities, it’s likely Congress is headed toward another “cliff” of its own making, which is exactly what reformers want to push the legislative branch over. “It’s time for the Senate to act,” Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-Ohio) told reporters Thursday, needling his counterpart in the Senate to take up the USA Freedom Act, legislation that passed the House on Wednesday. The measure makes modest reforms to the NSA’s bulk… Keep Reading

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