The federal government is urging an appeals court to dismiss a lawsuit addressing US President George W. Bush's domestic eavesdropping program, warning that disclosure of such activities could compromise national security.
"The suit's very subject matter -- including the relationship, if any, between AT&T and the government in connection with the secret intelligence activities alleged by plaintiffs -- is a state secret," the Justice Department argued in court papers.
The documents were filed late on Friday and released on Monday by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which brought the suit. It accuses AT&T Inc of illegally making communications on its networks available to the National Security Agency (NSA) without warrants, and challenges Bush's assertion that he could use his wartime powers to eavesdrop on Americans without a warrant.
The NSA had conducted the surveillance without a court warrant until January, when the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court began overseeing the program.
The court filings on Friday are part of the government's appeal of US District Judge Vaughn Walker's decision last year to keep the foundation's lawsuit alive. Walker ruled that warrantless eavesdropping has been so widely reported that there appears to be no danger of spilling secrets.
The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals has not said when it will rule on whether Walker was correct to allow the case to proceed to trial.
AT&T
AT&T, too, is seeking dismissal of the case and filed a brief that echoes much of the government's language.
Both the government and the telecommunications giant rely heavily upon a declaration last year by John Negroponte, then-director of national intelligence, that revealing information about the program could "cause exceptionally grave damage to the national security of the United States."
The foundation's standing to bring such a lawsuit cannot be established without disclosing "state secrets," the government and the company argue.
The plaintiffs do not have grounds to press such claims unless they can show "that AT&T in fact assisted in the alleged program, and that plaintiffs' own communications were in fact intercepted and accessed by the government under the alleged program," AT&T argued.
Moreover, the government said, the very merits of the case and whether it should be dismissed cannot be resolved in court because a "state secrets privilege" does not allow it.
The government also filed a classified brief on Friday that was not released publicly.
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