Oregon lawmakers, including Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeffrey Merkley, have "serious concerns" about a report that federal agents spied on protesters inPortland .- A report in The Nation said that federal agents had tapped protesters' phones.
- In a letter to the US
Department of Homeland Security , the lawmakers say that may violate the US Constitution. - "Congress has enacted strict legal protections which require government agencies to obtain the approval of an independent judge before searching Americans' devices and surveilling their communications," the lawmakers wrote.
The Trump administration may have violated the US Constitution by illegally spying on protesters in Portland, four Oregon lawmakers charged in a letter to
Earlier this week, The Nation reported that federal agents deployed by President Donald Trump may have intercepted protesters' phone communications and extracted data from their electronic devices.
"Congress has enacted strict legal protections which require government agencies to obtain the approval of an independent judge before searching Americans' devices and surveilling their communications," states the September 25 letter, signed by US Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, as well as US Reps. Earl Blumenauer and Suzanne Bonamici.
—Ron Wyden (@RonWyden) September 25, 2020
"These recent reports, which allege that DHS has deployed high-tech
The lawmakers ask DHS to come clean on whether it or any other government agency engaged in illegal surveillance —and whether DHS official Brian Murphy lied to Congress when, this summer, he denied the department had obtained any information from detained protesters' devices.
DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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