
© Allison Shelley/AFP
A US digital rights group is celebrating a "big victory" as a California judge has authorized it to conduct a discovery against the NSA and collect factual evidence of the agency's "warrantless" surveillance.
"We had been barred from doing so since the case was filed in 2008," the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
said in a press release.
It has been eight years since the group filed its
Jewel v. NSA suit, targeting the NSA on behalf of a former AT&T customer, Carolyn Jewel. According to the EFF and five plaintiffs it represents,
AT&T has collected and routed copies of internet traffic to a secret room in San Francisco controlled by the NSA.The EFF's complaint, aimed at "NSA in cooperation with AT&T", predated the public's awareness of Edward Snowden, the former intelligence contractor, who exposed the agency's surveillance operations in 2013.
In 2006, a former AT&T technician Mark Klein
claimed he helped to create the secure room where customer data was being collected by government agents.
Even though Jewel was eventually unable to prove that she was the victim, the EFF continues to fight for five other plaintiffs, "ordinary Americans who are current or former subscribers to AT&T's telephone and/or internet services."
Started as a case against AT&T, defendants in the lawsuit include the most powerful politicians in the US, such as former Vice President Dick Cheney, former President George W. Bush, and former NSA director Michael Hayden, among others.
Having gone through numerous court rejections, which have been challenging the EFF's efforts to end the mass surveillance, the group is marking "a big step" as Judge Jeffrey White of California District Court has pushed the case forward.
Comment: You can't make this stuff up.