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One Big Telecom CEO Refused To Cave To The NSA ... And He's Been In Jail For 4
Years
By
MICHAEL KELLEY
Former
Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio is currently serving a six-year sentence after being convicted of
insider trading in April 2007 for selling $52 million of stock in the spring of
2001 as the telecommunications carrier appeared to be deteriorating.
During the trial his defense team argued that
Nacchio, 63, believed Qwest was about to win secret government contracts that
would keep it in the black.
Nacchio alleged that the
government stopped offering the company lucrative contracts after Qwest
refused to cooperate with a National Security Agency surveillance program in
February 2001.
That claim gains
new relevance these days, amid leaks by whistleblower Edward
Snowden that allege widespread domestic surveillance by the NSA.
Back in 2006
Leslie Cauley of USA Today, citing multiple people with direct knowledge of the
arrangement, reported that shortly
after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks America's three largest telecoms
signed contracts to provide the NSA with detailed call records from hundreds of
millions of people across the country.
Cauley noted that
Qwest's refusal to participate "left the NSA with a hole in its
database" since the company served local phone service to 14 million
customers in 14 states.
The NSA, which
needed Qwest's participation to completely cover the country, pushed back hard.
...
... the agency suggested that Qwest's foot-dragging might affect its ability to get future classified work with the government.
Nacchio's legal concerns about the
NSA program at the time mirror those of
civil liberty groups today.
Cauley, citing
sources familiar with events, reported the NSA asserted that Qwest didn't need
a court order — or approval under Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (which oversees NSA snooping) — to provide the data.
"They told
(Qwest) they didn't want to [run the proposal by the FISA court] because FISA
might not agree with them," one NSA insider told USA Today.
There is a record
of the NSA running afoul of FISA: In July the FISA court ruled that the NSA violated the Fourth Amendment's restriction
against unreasonable searches and seizures "on at least one
occasion."
Furthermore,
Nacchio felt that it was unclear who would have access to Qwest customers'
information and how that information might be used. Sources told Cauley that
the NSA said government agencies including the FBI, CIA, and DEA might have access to
its massive database.
Nacchio entered prison on April
14, 2009 and is scheduled for release on September
21, 2013 (Federal inmates are typically required to serve at least 80
percent of a sentence, which would be 3.5 years in this case.)
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