Congressional Research Service report finds Bush White House rationale for warrantless NSA surveillance legally dubious. Former 9/11 commission chair, the former Republican governor of New Jersey, also doubts the program is legal:
Posted by Laura at January 6, 2006 08:11 PMThomas H. Kean, the former chairman of the Sept. 11 commission, said he too doubts the legality of the program. Weighing in for the first time on the controversy, he said in an interview that the commission was never told of the operation and that he has strong doubts about whether it is authorized under the law.
Federal law under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, created in 1978, "gives very broad powers to the president and, except in very rare circumstances, in my view ought to be used," said Mr. Kean, a Republican and former governor of New Jersey. "We live by a system of checks and balances, and I think we ought to continue to live by a system of checks and balances."