Show me the man and I will find you the crime
By Andrew P. Napolitano
While the nation’s political class has been fixated
on a potential government shutdown in Washington this week, the NSA has
continued to spy on all Americans and by its ambiguity and shrewd silence seems
to be acknowledging slowly that the scope of its spying is truly breathtaking.
The Obama administration is of the view that the NSA
can spy on anyone anywhere. The president believes that federal statutes enable
the secret FISA court to authorize the NSA to capture any information it
desires about any persons without identifying the persons and without a showing
of probable cause of criminal behavior on the part of the persons to be spied
upon. This is the same mindset that the British government had with respect to
the colonists. It, too, believed that British law permitted a judge in secret
in Britain to issue general warrants to be executed in the colonies at the whim
of British agents.
General warrants do not state the name of the place
to be searched or the person or thing to be seized, and they do not have the
necessity of individualized probable cause as their linchpin. They simply
authorize the bearer to search wherever he wishes for whatever he wants.
General warrants were universally condemned by colonial leaders across the
ideological spectrum — from those as radical as Sam Adams to those as
establishment as George Washington, and from those as individualistic as Thomas
Jefferson to those as big-government as Alexander Hamilton. We know from the
literature of the times that the whole purpose of the Fourth Amendment — with
its requirements of individualized probable cause and specifically identifying
the target — is to prohibit general warrants.
And yet, the FISA court has been issuing general
warrants and the NSA executing them since at least 2004.
Last week we learned in a curious colloquy between
members of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee and Gen. Keith Alexander
and Deputy Attorney General James Cole that it is more likely than not that the
FISA court has permitted the NSA to seize not only telephone, Internet and
texting records, but also utility bills, credit card bills, banking records,
social media records and digital images of mail, and that there is no upper
limit on the number of Americans’ records seized or the nature of those
records.
The judges of the FISA court are sworn to secrecy.
They can’t even possess the records of what they have done. There is no case or
controversy before them. There is no one before them to oppose what the NSA
seeks. They don’t listen to challenged testimony. All of this violates the
Constitution because it requires a real case or controversy before the
jurisdiction of federal courts may be invoked. So when a FISA court judge
issues an opinion declaring that NSA agents may spy to their hearts’ content,
such an opinion is meaningless because it did not emanate out of a case or
controversy. It is merely self-serving rhetoric, unchallenged and untested by
the adversarial process. Think about it: Without an adversary, who will
challenge the NSA when it exceeds the “permission” given by the FISA court or
when it spies in defiance of “permission” denied? Who will know?
For this reason, the FISA court is unconstitutional
at best and not even a court at worst. It consists of federal judges
administratively approving in secret the wishes of the government. By not
adjudicating a dispute, which is all that federal judges can do under the
Constitution, these judges are not performing a judicial function. Rather, they
are performing a clerical or an executive one, neither of which is contemplated
by the Constitution.
And yet, the president and his secret agents and the
politicians who support them would have you believe that the NSA’s spying has
been approved by bona fide federal courts. It has not. Does the Constitution
permit the federal government to put us all under a microscope? It does not.
The government is supposed to work for us and derive its powers from the
consent of the governed. Do you know anyone who consented to all this? I do
not.
The traditional bar that the government must meet in
order to begin gathering data on any of us is individualized articulable
suspicion about criminal behavior. The purpose of that requirement is to
prevent witch hunts and inquisitions and knocks on doors in the night. Without
that bar, there are no limits as to whom the feds can pursue.
What will become of us if the feds can watch our
every move and hear our every conversation and learn our every expenditure and
read our every email and find out what we eat and whom we love and how we live?
There are well over 4,500 federal crimes. The feds can find something wrong
that anyone has done. Stalin’s chief of secret police, the monster Lavrenti
Beria, once famously proclaimed: “Show me the man and I will find you the
crime.” History teaches that a government on a witch hunt, unconstrained by law
or Constitution, will not stop until it can brand someone as a witch. And an
unbridled inquisition will not stop until it finds a heretic. The Constitution
simply never entrusted the people who run the government with this awesome
power. Rather, in the Fourth Amendment, it prohibited it.
If the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness — which are the stated reasons for forming the United States of
America in the first place — mean anything, they mean that we all possess the
inalienable right to be different and the inalienable right to be left alone.
Neither of these rights can be honored when the government knows all. And when
the government knows all, and doesn’t like what it knows, we will have an
authoritarian state far more odious than any history has ever known.
On the face of an all-knowing secret government are
large and awful eyes — and no smiles
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