Will Trump Stop Domestic Spying?

Hacking a computer without consent or a search warrant is a crime, no matter where the computer is located, or by whom, writes Andrew P. Napolitano

Donald Trump at an event in West Palm Beach, Florida, in 2023. (Gage Skidmore, Flickr, CC BY-ND 2.0)

By Andrew P. Napolitano

During the course of an F.B.I. written response to a Freedom of Information Act request asking about the trade names and suppliers of surveillance software the F.B.I. had purchased, the government has yet again quietly acknowledged its antipathy to constitutional provisions that all of its employees have sworn to uphold.

Since we are dealing with software used to spy on Americans in the U.S. and abroad, the constitutional right being transgressed is the right to privacy.

This is the ancient natural right to be left alone, which the Supreme Court took 175 years to recognize as being protected by the Fourth Amendment. Since that recognition in 1965, however, notwithstanding near universal judicial acceptance of the constitutional protection of the right, the executive branch of the government has persistently negated it.

Here is the backstory.

The Fourth Amendment, which requires judicially issued search warrants based on probable cause of crime for all searches and seizures, protects the contents of devices that store data. Thus, the owners of mobile devices and desktop computers have a privacy right in the data they have stored there. Even a narrow interpretation of the amendment, which guarantees privacy in “persons, houses, papers, and effects,” must acknowledge that a computer chip is an “effect” and thus its owner enjoys this protection.

It is an allegiance to the plain language, general understanding and definitive judicial interpretations of the Fourth Amendment to which all in government have sworn.

During the first Trump administration, and likely behind the president’s back but with the knowledge of senior folks appointed by him, the F.B.I. purchased Israeli-manufactured software known as zero-click. Zero-click refers to the ability of the user of the software to target and download the contents of a computer without the need for tricking an unwary target into clicking on to a link. The manufacturer of this diabolic software is known as NSO, and the trade name of the software is Pegasus.

When President Joe Biden learned of the F.B.I.’s use of Pegasus without search warrants, he banned it from government use, and his Department of Commerce banned all American purchases from NSO. The F.B.I. now stores this software in a warehouse in New Jersey.

Why didn’t Biden just do his job and prohibit all warrantless domestic spying?

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When Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the former chair of the House Intelligence Committee, revealed that the Drug Enforcement Administration has purchased a similar product to Pegasus, called Graphite, from another Israeli manufacturer, called Paragon, Congress included in a $1.65 trillion omnibus legislation provisions that gives the director of national intelligence power to prohibit all parts of the intelligence community from purchasing or using foreign spyware.

Why didn’t Congress just do its job and prohibit all warrantless domestic spying?

The answers to these questions reflect that the intelligence community knows too much about American presidents and too many members of Congress for Congress to defy it. Thus, Rep. Schiff’s proposal, which became law, was premised upon a supposed congressional fear that the Israeli-manufactured spyware, when employed by the F.B.I. or DEA, could serve as a spying mechanism by the Israeli government on the American government.

F.B.I. headquarters in Washington, D.C., 2016. (Susan Melkisethian, Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

How quaint; spies spying on each other! Taxpayers paying for this. The Constitution trashed yet again. Congress concerned about itself and not the people it represents.

When Rep. Schiff’s civil liberties-defending colleague, Sen. Ron Wyden, (D-OR)re., asked the DEA about this, it declined to give him a clear answer. Sen. Wyden was concerned about the DEA spying on Americans outside the U.S. Outside? Yes, outside. For years, the governments of presidents of both parties have argued that the Fourth Amendment only restrains law enforcement, not intelligence, and they have argued that the Constitution only restrains the government in the U.S.

This discredited argument has been rejected by the Supreme Court since the 1940s, and as recently as 2008, when the court held that wherever the government goes to do its work, the Constitution goes with it. This holding is hardly novel. Rather, it is based on 400 years of British law that prohibited kings and sheriffs from removing defendants to places outside of Britain for torture and interrogation, only to be returned for trial.

Were this rule — wherever the government goes, so goes the Constitution — not so, then nothing would prevent the F.B.I. and DEA from doing what British officials tried to get away with.

Now, back to the feds spying on us. Joe Biden’s DEA, and Donald Trump’s before it, takes the position that when it operates outside the U.S. — such as its drug war against Mexico and Mexican civilians — it also operates outside the Constitution.

In order to prevent a judicial prohibition of its extra-constitutional lawlessness, lawyers for the DEA must labor mightily to keep its behavior and its well-discredited arguments from being aired in an American courtroom.

They do this in two ways. First, as addressed above, is to use quiet threats to coerce government officials to decline to prohibit expressly these practices. And second, if necessary, to dupe federal judges and defense lawyers by creating a fictitious version of its acquisition of evidence. The fiction usually posits a foreign intermediary handing over evidence to the feds who hand it to other feds who do not know of its criminal origins.

Criminal? Yes, criminal. Hacking a computer without consent or a search warrant is a crime, no matter where the computer is located, or by whom.

Rep. Schiff and Sen. Wyden are well-intentioned. They each have a consistent track record of defending civil liberties from attacks by the government. But the culture in Congress today prevents full-throated congressional defenses of privacy, no matter which party is in control.

We have elected a government and hired its employees to protect our liberties and our property. Today it does neither. Rather, it assaults them.

Will the new Donald Trump administration  put a stop to this?

Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, was the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel and hosts the podcast Judging Freedom. Judge Napolitano has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent is Suicide Pact: The Radical Expansion of Presidential Powers and the Lethal Threat to American Liberty. To learn more about Judge Andrew Napolitano, visit https://JudgeNap.com.

Published by permission of the author.

COPYRIGHT 2024 ANDREW P. NAPOLITANO 

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

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6 comments for “Will Trump Stop Domestic Spying?

  1. Sam F
    December 15, 2024 at 04:03

    Excellent article by judge Napolitano.

    I have seen these processes at work in
    1. Executive branch perjuries and unlawful secrecies of DOJ, FBI and HSA,
    2. Judicial branch perjuries of law and two-track system of unconstitutional decisions at all levels in all regions, and
    3. Legislative branch bribery via political party “donations” for anti-socialism and militarist theft in foreign policy.

    All branches of federal government betray the Constitution, because the structure it prescribes is inadequate.
    1. It does not protect government or mass media from economic power (bribes via political parties and businesses).
    2. Checks and balances were poorly designed, and must be within each branch having distinct powers.
    We have been so loyal to the old Chevy that we refuse to allow anyone to fix it, and it is thoroughly worn out.

    Without Jefferson’s revolutionary change in every generation, primitive tribalism and tyranny inevitably reign.
    Modern forms of tyranny require modern forms of education and political revolution.

  2. lester
    December 13, 2024 at 18:53

    Of course Trump will not correct this! Did the last Trump admin? Trump is our Caligula, he wants to enjoy the extremes of power, not do any favors for the rest of us.

    I’m waiting for a horse to join Trump’s cabinet.

  3. Carolyn/Cookie out west
    December 12, 2024 at 17:42

    thank you Judge Napolitano. Among the few voices in the wilderness calling repeatedly for peace at home and abroad.
    keep on keeping on…in solidarity, as Roy Bourgeoise M.M. says

  4. Richard Romano
    December 12, 2024 at 17:15

    The constitution-it’s is null and void and has been rendered a “goddamned piece of paper”

    So true, JonnyJames is correct. We have no bill of rights except to protecting the rich.

  5. December 12, 2024 at 16:42

    “For years, the governments of presidents of both parties have argued that the Fourth Amendment only restrains law enforcement, not intelligence, and they have argued that the Constitution only restrains the government in the U.S.”

    That’s f’kg bullshit. The 4th amendment clearly states, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

    It doesn’t mention cops, spies, agricultural inspectors or anyone else. What it means, in simple English, is that ANY unreasonable search or seizure, without probable cause, is a violation of that right granted by the Constitution. If the court can read that in any other way, then you can throw the whole Constitution in the trash.

  6. JonnyJames
    December 12, 2024 at 14:32

    Will DT stop this? Is Judge Napolitano really that gullible and naive? or ideologically blinkered? He previously praised Elon the Oligarch and DT for promoting “free speech”. TwitterX and the Techno-Totalitarian oligarchy is censoring information it does not like, including CN. WTF? I’m afraid the good judge’s credibility is severely damaged by his inaccurate claims, wishful thinking and baseless hope.

    The Constitution? please -it’s is null and void and has been rendered a “goddamned piece of paper”: all three branches of govt. have demonstrated deep-seated institutional corruption. Yet many ignore the corruption and naively believe in the civil mythology of US democracy and the rule of law.

    After Citizens United, how can we speak of a functioning democracy to begin with, when political bribery is legal?

    Government and corporate surveillance is rampant. Remember Ed Snowden? Wikileaks? Under the first DT regime, Michael “Fat Mike” Pompeo wanted to put a hit out on Julian Assange. Did everyone forget already?

    Why does the judge think that it will be different this time? The evidence points to the contrary.

    BTW, despite the mass media ignoring it, the genocide continues and the new DT regime will continue the genocide. Just ask Miriam Adelson and the Kushners about it.

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