Foreign Surveillance

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The House Intelligence Committee’s Section 702 Markup Was a Politicized Debacle

On Dec. 1, 2017, the House Intelligence Committee took the unusual step of holding an open markup of its bill to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance…

Why Microsoft Challenged the Right Law: A Response to Orin Kerr

This coming spring, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the United States v. Microsoft – a case that will determine the authority of U.S. law enforcement to compel, via…
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Episode 47 of the National Security Law Podcast: Donuts and Depth Charges

And…we’re back! Fresh off of Thanksgiving, Professor Chesney and I are (all too) fired up to discuss the latest national security law news (not to mention a bunch of stuff…
A general view of the 24 hour Operations Room inside GCHQ, which Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne was shown by of Director of GCHQ Robert Hannigan and Cheltenham MP Alex Chalk on November 17, 2015 in Cheltenham, England. Two large TV screens rest on a wall, and three people sit in front of computers each with two screens.

The “Backdoor Search Loophole” Isn’t Our Only Problem: The Dangers of Global Information Sharing

The upcoming expiration of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) has launched a fresh wave of debate on how the statute’s “backdoor search loophole”…

Episode 44 of the National Security Law Podcast: Interrogation, Prosecution, and Detention Issues in the Wake of the NYC Attack

We are back, one day after dropping episode 43, with an emergency podcast discussion the legal consequences of the horrific attack that occurred in New York City yesterday.  The…

What Manafort’s Indictment May Tell Us About Russian Election Meddling

Make no mistake. Paul Manafort’s arrest is very likely directly tied to Russian intelligence operations. Even a quick look at his indictment shows this. In Ukraine, Manafort…
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Recap of Recent Pieces on Just Security (Oct. 21-27)

Russia Investigation and Facebook Ryan Goodman, Top Experts: Can Facebook Legally Disclose Russian Ads–What does the Stored Communications Act say? Artin Afkhami, Former Federal…

Episode 42 of the National Security Law Podcast: The Magic Bullet Travel Ban(d)

In this week’s episode, Bobby Chesney and I start with a close look at Smith v. Trump, a case that seeks a judicial ruling on whether the Islamic State really falls within…
Clouds pass over the U.S. Capitol on March 7, 2017 in Washington, DC.

Closing Section 702’s Front-Door Search Loophole: A Critical Protection for Americans

As the December 31st expiration date for Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) approaches, the debate over reauthorization is in full swing. Most of the…
John B. Bellinger, III, Kathryn Ruemmler, Lisa Monaco, and Ryan Goodman sit on a panel at NYU Law.

NYU Law Forum: “National Security: The Role of Senior Advisers in the White House”

On October 18, the Latham & Watkins Forum at NYU Law presented discussion on “National Security: The Role of Senior Advisers in the White House.” Just Security…

Surveillance “Reform”: The Fourth Amendment’s Long, Slow, Goodbye

Over 16 years after the 9/11 attacks and the subsequent repeated passage or renewal of draconian “temporary” but “emergency” domestic surveillance laws in response, it’s…

What the FISA Warrants Against Paul Manafort Tell Us About Mueller’s Investigation

The Trump-Russia saga has more characters than War and Peace and plot twists harder to follow than Game of Thrones. So making sense of the latest news – that the FBI had…
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