From: merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: a3c8d10d085103f5ea1ac663fc23f45eb5cd88e16af9e687cab082ef6ceafc86
Message ID: <199410040002.AA18561@metronet.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1994-10-04 00:09:21 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 3 Oct 94 17:09:21 PDT
From: merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)
Date: Mon, 3 Oct 94 17:09:21 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Judge Rejects Delay on FBI Wiretap Data
Message-ID: <199410040002.AA18561@metronet.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
>Subject: Judge Rejects Delay on FBI Wiretap Data
>Date: 3 Oct 1994 16:49:03 GMT
>=============================================================
>PRESS RELEASE
>For immediate release
>October 3, 1994
>Contact:
> Marc Rotenberg, EPIC Director
> David Sobel, EPIC Legal Counsel
> 202 544 9240 (tel)
> JUDGE REJECTS DELAY ON FBI WIRETAP DATA;
> "STUNNED" BY BUREAU'S REQUEST
>WASHINGTON, D.C.- A federal judge today denied the FBI's request
>for a five-year delay in processing documents concerning wiretap
>legislation now pending in Congress.
> Saying he was "stunned" by the Bureau's attempt to postpone
>court proceedings for five years, U.S. District Judge Charles R.
>Richey ordered the FBI to release the material or to explain its
>reasons for withholding it by November 4.
> The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public
>interest research group based in Washington, DC, filed the Freedom
>of Information Act lawsuit on August 9, the day legislation was
>introduced in Congress to authorize the expenditure of $500
>million to make the nation's communications systems easier to
>wiretap. The group is seeking the public release of two surveys
>cited by FBI Director Louis Freeh in support of the pending
>legislation.
> The FBI had moved to stay proceedings in the case until June
>1999, more than five years after the filing of the initial
>request. The Bureau asserted it was confronted with "a backlog of
>pending FOIA requests awaiting processing." The FBI revealed that
>there are "an estimated 20 pages to be reviewed" but said that the
>materials would not be reviewed until "sometime in March 1999."
> Judge Richey rejected the FBI's claims in sharp language from
>the bench. He told the government's attorney to "call Director
>Freeh and tell him I said this matter can be taken care of in an
>hour and a half."
> In court papers filed late last week, EPIC charged that
>the requested materials are far too important to be kept secret.
>"The requested surveys were part of the FBI's long-standing
>campaign to gain passage of unprecedented legislation requiring
>the nation's telecommunications carriers to redesign their
>telephone networks to more easily facilitate court-ordered
>wiretapping," said the EPIC brief.
> Earlier documents obtained through the FOIA in similar
>litigation with the FBI revealed no technical obstacles to the
>exercise of court-authorized wire surveillance.
> The FBI is pushing for quick enactment of the wiretap
>legislation in the closing days of the 103rd Congress. A
>grassroots campaign to oppose the measure is being coordinated by
>EPIC and Voters Telecomm Watch.
> The Electronic Privacy Information Center is a project of
>Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, a membership
>organization based in Palo Alto, California, and the Fund for
>Constitutional Government, a Washington-based foundation dedicated
>to the protection of Constitutional freedoms. 202 544 9240 (tel),
>202 547 5482 (fax), info@epic.org (e-mail).
>=============================================================
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1994-10-04 (Mon, 3 Oct 94 17:09:21 PDT) - Re: Judge Rejects Delay on FBI Wiretap Data - merriman@metronet.com (David K. Merriman)