NYT Wants Page Surveillance Documents Unsealed

News  |  Feb 5, 2018

The New York Times is asking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) to unseal documents related to the FBI's surveillance of Trump campaign foreign policy advisor Carter Page

The motion is unusual. No such wiretapping application materials apparently have become public since Congress first enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978. That law regulates electronic spying on domestic soil — the interception of phone calls and emails — undertaken in the name of monitoring suspected spies and terrorists, as opposed to wiretapping for investigating ordinary criminal suspects.

Normally, even the existence of such material is a closely guarded secret ...

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But President Trump lowered the shield of secrecy surrounding such materials on Friday by declassifying the Republican memo about Mr. Page, after finding that the public interest in disclosing its contents outweighed any need to protect the information. Because Mr. Trump did so, the Times argues, there is no longer a justification “for the Page warrant orders and application materials to be withheld in their entirety,” and “disclosure would serve the public interest.”

Read more: The Times Asks Court to Unseal Documents on Surveillance of Carter Page (NYT)

Motion for the Publication of Court Records