Confirmed: NSA conducts warrantless searches on Americans
                                                     Published time: April 01, 2014                              
United States intelligence officials have been scouring the personal communications of innocent Americans, the nation’s top spy chief now acknowledges, using a procedure that’s allegedly lawful and constitutionally sound.
  Director of National Intelligence James Clapper admitted as much  in a letter sent last week to US Senator Ron Wyden (D-Oregon),  who two months ago was promised an answer by the DNI during a  heated discussion on the floor of Congress about what the  National Security Agency can and cannot do. 
  The debate between Wyden and the country’s top intelligence  officer began much earlier than that, though, and Clapper’s  latest acknowledgement comes nine months after the NSA insisted  Americans needn’t worry about being targeted by the US  government’s vast surveillance apparatus. 
  Since the George W. Bush administration, the Foreign Intelligence  Surveillance Act has provided the American government with the  ability to collect communications sent to or from any non  US-persons located abroad, and Sen. Wyden has been one of the  most adamant critics of that authority since even before the  first Snowden leaks surfaced last June. Practically one year  before the NSA leaker became a household name, in fact, Sen.  Wyden asked the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community  for details on how many Americans have been targeted by the NSA  since Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act was approved in 2008  and the NSA began to sweep up the online and over-the-phone  activities of Americans engaged in conversation with persons  located outside of the country. 
“If no one will even estimate how many Americans have had  their communications collected under this law then it is all the  more important that Congress act to close the ‘back door  searches’ loophole, to keep the government from searching for  Americans’ phone calls and emails without a warrant,” Wyden  told Wired’s Danger Room back in June 2012. 
  When the first Snowden leaks began one year to the month later,  the NSA issued a “fact sheet” that said Section 702 authority   “allows only the targeting, for foreign intelligence  purposes, of communications of foreign persons who are located  abroad.” 
  “The government may not target any US person anywhere in the  world under this authority, nor may it target a person outside of  the US if the purpose is to acquire information from a  particular, known person inside the US,” the memorandum  continued. 
  Even then, however, Wyden wasn’t satisfied. "We were  disappointed to see that this fact sheet contains an inaccurate  statement about how the Section 702 authority has been  interpreted by the US government," he wrote in a joint letter to then-NSA Director Gen.  Keith Alexander sent last June along with the signature of Sen.  Mark Udall. "In our judgment this inaccuracy is significant,  as it portrays protections for Americans' privacy as being  significantly stronger than they actually are." 
  As the NSA leaks continued to drip, last August Mr. Snowden  supplied The Guardian newspaper with cold hard proof that  reaffirmed Sen. Wyden’s worries. 
“The National Security Agency has a secret backdoor into its  vast databases under a legal authority enabling it to search for  US citizens' email and phone calls  without a warrant,” journalists James Ball and Spencer  Ackerman wrote for the paper last August after seeing  a secret NSA document supplied to them by Snowden. 
  When Clapper testified before Congress earlier this year, Wyden  once more insisted on getting a straight answer out of the  intelligence community’s top officer. During a January 29  intelligence hearing on worldwide threats, Wyden asked Clapper if  the NSA has ever conducted “warrantless searches” on the  information contained in those databases by using   “specific” Americans’ identifying information to conduct  those queries. 
  At the time, Clapper said he’d prefer not to discuss the matter  in the midst of the hearing and would instead issue a  declassified answer within 30 days. That official response,  albeit delayed, was sent to the senator’s office last Friday, and  reaffirmed what Snowden said all along. 
“There have been queries, using US person identifiers, of  communications lawfully acquired to obtain foreign intelligence  targeting non-US persons reasonably believed to be located  outside the United States,” Clapper wrote to Wyden.   “These queries were performed pursuant to minimization  procedures approved by the FISA court and consistent with the  statute and the Fourth Amendment.” 
James Ball, the Guardian journalist who claimed as much by citing  a secret Snowden document in August, tweeted on Monday that the  letter from Clapper confirmed what he wrote months earlier. 
Guardian revealed existence of legal "backdoor" in August. NSA today finally confirmed they made use of it in a letter to @RonWyden
Additionally, Ball claimed that the intelligence swept up by the NSA and made available through FISA — including information pertaining to innocent US citizens — is the same that’s processed through the previously secret surveillance program code-named PRISM.
  In a nutshell, that means that the US government has interpreted  FISA in a way that allows the NSA to collected the emails and  phones calls of Americans — as long as at least one of the  parties involved is a foreigner located abroad — and then query  that data by keying in search terms specific to the US citizen: a   “backdoor search loophole” that Sen. Wyden said must be  fixed during an interview over the weekend on the NBC program   “Meet the Press.” 
  “What this is,” Wyden said, “is this allows the  government to look at the emails of law-abiding Americans. That  needs to be fixed. And then, I believe strongly we ought to ban  all dragnet surveillance on law-abiding Americans; not just phone  records, but also medical records, purchases and others.” 
  “What the government has been doing is running a federal  human relations database,” Wyden alleged. “When the  government has the information about who you called, when you  called, they know a lot about your private life.” 
In that same interview, Sen. Wyden also called on Congress to  heed President Barack Obama’s recent suggestion and draft  legislation that will abolish the NSA’s current practice of  collecting the telephony metadata pertaining to millions of  Americans on a daily basis. In the meantime, though, Wyden said  that the intelligence community could use an “upgrade”   with regards to leadership — and particularly DNI Clapper. 
 
      
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