L
Lloyd Parker
Guest
In article
<kurtullman-F49EC0.10524905102006@customer-201-125-217-207.uninet.net.mx>,
Kurt Ullman <kurtullman@yahoo.com> wrote:
warrant. The FISA act seems clear as does the 4th amendment. Further, nobody
has proven the NSA was only eavesdropping on overseas calls.
<kurtullman-F49EC0.10524905102006@customer-201-125-217-207.uninet.net.mx>,
Kurt Ullman <kurtullman@yahoo.com> wrote:
No it doesn't. If you're listening to Americans in America, you need aIn article <eg32hc$5l0$6@leto.cc.emory.edu>,
lparker@emory.edu (Lloyd Parker) wrote:
In article
kurtullman-8700B9.17512004102006@customer-201-125-217-207.uninet.net.mx>,
Kurt Ullman <kurtullman@yahoo.com> wrote:
In article <HLVUg.13315$7I1.5654@newssvr27.news.prodigy.net>,
lucasea@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
I don't care. If you're listening to a phone call to which the phone in
my
living room is party, then as a citizen of the US, I demand that your
listening be carried out according to my Constitutional rights.
Probably is. Under a warrant for a phone anything that goes on over
that phone is legally admissable, even if the other person's phone
doesn't have a warrant on it.
Bush didn't get warrants!
Read the next para which is a nice, coherent and well thought out
suggestion as to why one may not be needed.
It well settled that as long as one phone
is legally tapped, any phone that calls it or is called by it is fair
game. Since there are no restrictions on tapping a phone outside of the
country, it would be legal tap. Thus anyone the phone calls or anyone
who calls the phone could be listened to as noted. Would be a rather
interesting case to make.
warrant. The FISA act seems clear as does the 4th amendment. Further, nobody
has proven the NSA was only eavesdropping on overseas calls.