Posted on 01/31/2007 10:05:11 AM PST by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON - Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said Wednesday he will turn over secret documents detailing the government's domestic spying program, ending a two-week standoff with the Senate Judiciary Committee over surveillance targeting terror suspects.
"It's never been the case where we said we would never provide the access," Gonzales told reporters.
"We'd obviously be concerned about (how) the public disclosure may jeopardize the national security of our country," he said. "But we're working with the Congress to provide the information that it needs."
The documents held by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court including investigators' applications for permission to spy and judges' orders will be given to some lawmakers as early as Wednesday.
Gonzales said the documents would not be released publicly. "We're talking about highly classified discussions about highly classified actions of the United States government," the attorney general said.
The records will be given to Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (news, bio, voting record), D-Vt., and the panel's top Republican, Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record), R-Pa., who two weeks ago lambasted Gonzales for refusing to turn over documents that even the FISA Court's presiding judge had no objection to releasing.
The documents also will be available to lawmakers and staffers on the House and Senate intelligence committees. These people already were cleared to receive details about the controversial spy program.
Leahy and Specter did not have an immediate comment.
The documents are being turned over two weeks after a testy Senate hearing, during which lawmakers hammered Gonzales for refusing to provide details about the court's new oversight and whether it provides adequate privacy protections.
President Bush secretly authorized the spying program after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, allowing the National Security Agency to bypass court review and conduct domestic surveillance of people suspected of links to terrorism.
The program, which a federal judge last August declared unconstitutional, monitors phone calls and e-mails between the United States and other countries when such a link is suspected.
On Jan. 17, the day before the Senate hearing, Gonzales announced that that the FISA Court had assumed oversight authority of the surveillance program a week earlier, and had already approved at least one warrant targeting a person suspected of having terror ties.
Senators demanded to know more about how judges on the secret court might consider evidence when approving government requests to spy on people in the United States. And FISA Court Presiding Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, in a letter released at the hearing, said she had no objection to giving lawmakers copies of orders and opinions relating to the secret panel's oversight of the spy program.
"The records will be given to Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (news, bio, voting record), D-Vt., and the panel's top Republican, Sen. Arlen Specter"
I stopped reading.
Details coming soon, very soon, to a Washington Post front page story near you.
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales speaks about the arrest of James Seale during news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington January 25, 2007. Seale, a former Ku Kux Klan member, has been charged in connection with the murder of two black teenagers abducted and killed in Mississippi in 1964 at the height of the U.S. civil rights era. With Gonzales is FBI director Robert Mueller. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque (UNITED STATES)
...and from Leahy the records will be in the hands of Al Qaeda within the hour.
Heck, I'll probably be able to get myself a copy off of Amazon before too long.
BIG MISTAKE!!!
Not only with they not "appreciate" it...they will use it to once again bash Bush.
Good, were going to see just how "domestic" this spying was, and settle this.
I hear a call when down to the front page editor's desk at the NYT to clear tomorrow's front page for "Big Washington news, via Vermont."
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.