From Ron Singel, for Wired Magazine
That might have been the end of it. But in December 2005 The New York Times revealed that the government had been spying on Americans’ overseas communications without warrants, and Al-Haramain’s lawyers realized why the FBI had been so adamant about getting the document back.
“I got up in the morning and read the story, and I thought, ‘My god, we had a log of a wiretap and it may or may not have been the NSA and on further reflection it was NSA,” says Thomas Nelson, who represents Al-Haramain and Belew. “So we decided to file a lawsuit.”
The lawyers retrieved one of the remaining copies of the document — presumably from Saudi Arabia — and used it to file a complaint in U.S. District Court in Oregon in February of last year. They sought damages from the government of $1 million each for Belew and Ghafoor, and the unfreezing of Al-Haramain’s assets, because that action relied on the allegedly illegal spying.
The lawsuit is poised to blow a hole through a bizarre catch-22 that has dogged other legal efforts to challenge the Bush administration’s warrantless surveillance.