US lawmaker sues Obama over NSA data collection

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February 13, 2014

Republican senator Rand Paul files lawsuit against US President Barack Obama over data collection by the NSA; says people are outraged that their records are taken without a warrant

February 13, 2014

Republican senator Rand Paul files lawsuit against US President Barack Obama over data collection by the NSA; says people are outraged that their records are taken without a warrant

Washington: A US lawmaker Wednesday officially filed his class-action lawsuit against the Obama administration over National Security Agency (NSA) data collection, joining with two prominent tea party leaders to make the announcement.

Rand Paul, a Republican senator from Kentucky, inveighed against NSA surveillance and promised a "historic" lawsuit. He and his allies hope to take the case, which focuses on the NSA's gathering of telephone metadata, to the Supreme Court, Xinhua reported.

The suit challenges US President Barack Obama, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and NSA Director Keith Alexander.

There's a huge and growing swell of protest in this country of people who are outraged that their records are being taken without suspicion, without a judge's warrant and without individualization, Paul told reporters at press conference.

Ken Cuccinelli, Virginia's former attorney general, is serving as lead counsel for the case. Paul was also joined by Matt Kibbe, the president and CEO of the tea party-tied group FreedomWorks. The men stressed they wanted to make sure the NSA was not going beyond the boundaries of the constitution.

The senator also argued that there's "no evidence" that NSA surveillance of phone data has stopped terrorism, even as the agency's proponents say it plays an important role in keeping the country safe.

Reports over the weekend indicated that the NSA takes information only from 20 percent of American calls, or less – a lower figure than previously thought.

But Paul noted that the point is not how many percent NSA took, but whether or not you still collect millions of people's information with a single warrant.

In response to the lawsuit, the Justice Department said Wednesday that the telephone metadata programme is legal, as at least 15 judges have previously found.

Paul has been publicly promoting the lawsuit for weeks — an effort that appears to also be helping him build a campaign infrastructure for 2016, when he's up for re-election to the Senate and when the White House is in play.


Courtesy: IANS