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Thursday, December 7, 2023
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Politics|Warrantless Surveillance Can Continue Even if Law Expires, Officials
Say

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/06/us/politics/warrantless-surveillance-legislation-section-702.html
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WARRANTLESS SURVEILLANCE CAN CONTINUE EVEN IF LAW EXPIRES, OFFICIALS SAY

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Administration lawyers have concluded that the N.S.A. and the F.B.I. can
lawfully keep operating the government’s warrantless surveillance program into
April, even if Congress does not reauthorize it by an end-of-year
deadline.Credit...Jim Lo Scalzo/European Pressphoto Agency


By Charlie Savage

 * Dec. 6, 2017

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has decided that the National Security
Agency and the F.B.I. can lawfully keep operating their warrantless surveillance
program even if Congress fails to extend the law authorizing it before an
expiration date of New Year’s Eve, according to American officials.

National security officials have implored Congress for the past year and a half
to extend the legal basis for the program, Section 702 of the FISA Amendments
Act, before it lapses at the end of the month. They portrayed such a bill as the
“top legislative priority” for keeping the country safe.

But with Congress focused on passing a major tax cut and divided over what
changes, if any, to make to the surveillance program, lawmakers may miss that
deadline. Hedging against that risk, executive branch lawyers have now concluded
that the government could lawfully continue to spy under the program through
late April without new legislation.

Intelligence officials nonetheless remain intent on getting lawmakers to pass a
durable extension of Section 702 by the end of the month — warning that even a
stopgap short-term extension of several months, as some lawmakers have proposed,
would risk throwing the program into a crisis in the spring.

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Nicholas Fandos contributed reporting.

Follow Charlie Savage on Twitter: @charlie_savage.

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 7, 2017, Section A, Page 21
of the New York edition with the headline: Secret Wiretaps, With or Without
Congress’s Say-So. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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