We Are Suing the Justice Department for Trump Surveillance Warrants
LatestToday, Gizmodo’s parent company, Gizmodo Media Group, filed a Freedom of Information Act complaint in a New York federal district court against the Department of Justice, seeking the warrant applications that the FBI used to justify surveillance against Trump campaign officials and their associates.
Those warrant applications—presented to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which secretly authorizes wiretaps for intelligence purposes—were the apparent spark for Donald Trump’s March 4 Twitter outburst accusing the Obama administration of having “had my ‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower.”
Trump’s claim that Barack Obama had directed surveillance against him was false (there is no legal mechanism for any president to unilaterally order wiretapping). But the FBI was pursuing some sort of counterintelligence mission involving the Trump camp. There is a wealth of reporting that the Trump campaign or its associates were subject to some sort of eavesdropping, authorized by an FISC judge at the request of the Department of Justice’s National Security Division.
Because the warrant applications may clarify the scope of investigators’ interest in Trump’s circle, and the scope of federal eavesdropping practices generally, we want to see them, as well as any other information submitted to the court regarding the Trump surveillance.
Warrant applications to the FISC are typically classified, and under normal circumstances, the government will not only refuse to release them in response to FOIA requests—it will refuse to even confirm or deny whether they exist at all. This is known as a “Glomar response,” after a famous FOIA case in which the CIA refused to confirm or deny the existence of records about the Glomar Explorer, a ship that was secretly used to salvage a sunken Soviet submarine.
When Kel McClanahan, an attorney with the public interest law firm National Security Counselors, filed a FOIA request for the warrants on our behalf last month, that’s exactly what we got: The Justice Department refused “to confirm or deny the existence of any records responsive to your request because the existence or nonexistence of any responsive records is currently and properly classified.”