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Alex G

12/28/05 9:56 PM

#146225 RE: yayaa #146221

"Let Me See If I Have This Straight... On 9/11/01, Al Qaeda terrorists executed... This plan resulted in the deaths of over 3,000 American civilians...

In the wake of these attacks, having been given broad Congressional approval to pursue Al Qaeda to the ends of the earth, President Bush...
" went to war with Iraq, forgot about bin Laden, has sent 2172 U.S. service men and women to the grave, sent 30,000 Iraqi civilians to the grave, turned a secular muslim society into a hotbed of muslim extremists and created more hatred of America for generations to come

but as long as yayaa can tee it up on Saturday and let others do the bleeding and dying, why should he care

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Alex G

12/28/05 11:36 PM

#146259 RE: yayaa #146221

Bush’s Secret Spying Program: Good News For Guilty Terrorists

http://thinkprogress.org/2005/12/28/guilty-terrorists/

At today’s press briefing, White House spokesman Trent Duffy was asked about a story in today’s New York Times, which reported that Bush’s warrantless domestic spying program could undermine key terrorism prosecutions:

Q: The New York Times reports today that there are several legal challenges based on the NSA wiretaps. Are you concerned that these challenges could jeopardize the cases against people you guys have already described as very bad people?

MR. DUFFY: …[W]e decline to comment on any pending cases, but I don’t think it should serve as any surprise that defense attorneys are looking at ways to represent their clients; that’s what defense attorneys do.

Duffy’s right, criminal defense lawyers are looking for ways that their clients can avoid conviction. And Bush’s actions have given them an easy way to do it. The program violated federal criminal law — the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. As a result, any information collected by the program is inadmissible in court. (This principle is called the exclusionary rule.) If that information is critical to the government’s case, a guilty terrorist might be found not guilty.

What’s worse, if what the administration says is true, none of this was necessary. If all of the surveillance targeted people associated with al Qaeda, as the administration claims, it would have been easily approved by the FISA court. That process would not have delayed the surveillance since a warrant can be obtained up to 72 hours after the surveillance starts.

The Bush administration says the program is justified because it made us safer. The opposite appears to be true. The program has made us less safe by needlessly complicating the prosecution of terrorist suspects.