Senate Judiciary Committee drops telecom immunity provision
unbelievable how these little victories in battles we should never have had to fight in the first goddam place make me feel like breaking out another bottle of argentine malbec...
(thanks to john at americablog...)
AND...
oh, and btw, F*** you, difi...
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(thanks to john at americablog...)
Civil liberties groups got a stunningly unexpected win Thursday as the Senate Judiciary panel passed their version of the new government spying bill out of committee without including a provision giving immunity to telecoms being sued for helping the government secretly spy on Americans.
The biggest winner from the development is the Electronic Frontier Foundation, whose suit against AT&T in federal court would almost certainly have been wiped out by the immunity provision.
The provision - which was part of the version passed by the Senate Intelligence committee in mid-October - was widely expected to make it into the bill, due to the administration's full court press on the issue, the telcos small army of lobbyists and the vocal support of California Democrat Dianne Feintstein. Feinstein's vote was expected to reverse the Dems 10-9 advantage in the committee.
But after a long day of complicated finagling over technical amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and proposed alternatives to total immunity for companies such as AT&T and Verizon, committeee chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) decided to send the bill out of committee without an agreement on immunity.
AND...
The eavesdropping bill before the House also lacks immunity for telecommunications companies.
oh, and btw, F*** you, difi...
Labels: ATT, Civil liberties, constitutional crisis, EFF, FISA, Patrick Leahy, retroactive immunity, Senate Judiciary Committee, telecommunications companies
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