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A class action lawsuit, alleging that AT&T improperly cooperated with the National Security Agency's surveillance program, will proceed with restrictions while the government appeals to a higher court.
A whistleblower who helped reveal government spying on the internet has discovered the Los Angeles Times aborted breaking the story at the request of the Bush administration. The whisteblower, Mark Klein, is a former technician at AT&T. Last year, Klein revealed the National Security Agency had set up secret spy rooms in several AT&T offices. In an interview with ABC News, Klein says he worked with am L.A. Times reporter for two months to reveal the secret program. But Klein says editors killed the story at the request of then-National Intelligence Director John Negroponte and then-NSA director General Michael Hayden. He then went to the New York Times.
It's rediculous when the government can interfere with media broadcasts. Especially when they are reporting on the very thing the government is guilty of.
MONTPELIER – Vermont regulators are in a "wait and see" mode in the eight-month-old investigation into allegations that two telephone companies improperly gave the federal government access to customer information.
Last month, that case was joined with others – including individual consumer suits against the telephone companies and the government's suits against other states seeking to block their inquires – into a multi-district case before a federal court in California
AT&T and Verizon have issued carefully worded denials of the original news story concerning their alleged participation in the NSA program, and federal officials have argued in court that the suits and investigations should not go forward due to national security concerns.
SAN FRANCISCO - The federal government is urging an appeals court to dismiss a lawsuit challenging President 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 NSA had conducted the surveillance without a court warrant until January, when the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court began overseeing the program.
It's rediculous when the government can interfere with media broadcasts. Especially when they are reporting on the very thing the government is guilty of.