NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York Times sued the U.S.
Defense Department on Monday demanding that it hand over
documents about the National Security Agency's domestic spying
program.
The Times wants a list of documents including all internal
memos and e-mails about the program of monitoring phone calls
without court approval. It also seeks the names of the people
or groups identified by it.
The Times in December broke the story that the NSA had
begun intercepting domestic communications believed linked to
al Qaeda following the September 11 attacks. That provoked
renewed criticism of the way U.S.
President George W. Bush is
handling his declared war on terrorism.
Bush called the disclosure of the program to the Times a
"shameful act" and the U.S. Justice Department has launched an
investigation into who leaked it.
The Times had requested the documents in December under the
Freedom of Information Act but sued upon being unsatisfied with
the
Pentagon's response that the request was "being processed
as quickly as possible," according to the six-page suit filed
at federal court in New York.
David McCraw, a lawyer for the Times, acknowledged that the
list of documents sought was lengthy but that the Pentagon
failed to assert there were "unusual circumstances," a
provision of the law that would grant the Pentagon extra time
to respond.
The Defense Department, which was sued as the parent agency
of the NSA, did not immediately respond to the suit.
McCraw said there was "no connection" between the Justice
Department probe and the Times' lawsuit.
"This is an important story that our reporters are
continuing to pursue and of the ways to do that is through the
Freedom of Information Act," McCraw said.
The U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act requires the
federal government to obtain warrants from a secret federal
court for surveillance operations inside the United States.
But the Bush administration says the president as commander
in chief of the armed forces has the authority to carry out the
intercepts and that Congress also gave him the authority upon
approving the use of force in response to the September 11
attacks.