EfficientTimes.com
  • Politics
  • Tech News
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
InvestingStock

Revelation that Biden’s FBI Spied on Republican Senators Reveals Need to Tighten Phone Surveillance Laws

by October 8, 2025
October 8, 2025

Matthew Cavedon

FBI surveillance

On Monday, Senator Chuck Grassley (R‑IA) revealed that the FBI spied on nine Republican senators during the Biden administration. Politico responded by dismissively huffing that the agency did not technically tap the Senators’ phones—it merely tracked the time and length of the calls they made. It should have added that the FBI also logged who was involved in the Senators’ calls.

First, the bad news for the senators and the rest of us: the Supreme Court has held that agents recording every number called from a telephone is not a search under the Fourth Amendment. The Court’s reasoning? “[W]e doubt that people in general entertain any actual expectation of privacy in the numbers they dial,” because everyone knows the phone company will monitor who they call, and the Fourth Amendment does not protect information an American “voluntarily turns over to third parties.”

As a matter of law-chamber sociology, that’s ridiculous. Yes, everyone knows that AT&T or T‑Mobile computers keep your call logs somewhere. But no one thinks that by using phones, they invite the government to snoop on how often they’re calling the oncologist, the accountant, the minister, a political rival, or a mistress. Even just pulling basic call information—like the FBI did to the senators—uncovers “a wealth of detail” about people’s “familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations.”

The Supreme Court’s logic is also bonkers as a matter of the law of privacy more generally. It’s usually obvious that privacy can be “waived for one purpose,” like phone billing, “and still asserted for another.” For these reasons, Brent Skorup and Laura Bondank recently joined a long line of Cato scholars criticizing this “third-party consent” exception to the Fourth Amendment. Hopefully, the Supreme Court will come to agree with Cato that a search is simply an action undertaken with the “purpose of finding something”—such as tracking who calls whom and for how long.

But in the meantime, here’s the good news: the very senators who were spied on can ensure that this intrusion does not happen to them or their fellow Americans again. Even if the Supreme Court reads the Fourth Amendment too narrowly, Congress can pass a statute requiring the FBI to get a warrant before monitoring call information. That’s exactly what Congress has already done for wiretaps.

Senator Grassley has said that there will be consequences following his revelation: “If heads don’t roll in this town, nothing changes.” He should make good on his word by instituting new statutory limits on call-information monitoring.

previous post
Medicare’s Real Fiscal Crisis Is Much Worse than Trust Fund Insolvency
next post
The Grumpy Economist on “U.S. Health Care: The Free-market Myth”

You may also like

Finlay Minerals Announces Closing of Non-Brokered Private Placement...

October 18, 2025

Tech Weekly: Broadcom and OpenAI Sign Deal, AMD...

October 18, 2025

Top 5 Canadian Mining Stocks This Week: JZR...

October 18, 2025

US Cancels US$500 Million Cobalt Tender in Setback...

October 17, 2025

Vince Lanci: Silver’s London Liquidity Crisis — What’s...

October 17, 2025

CSE Bulletin: MOC Eligibility Update

October 17, 2025

The Real Drivers of This Market: AI, Semis...

October 16, 2025

July Strength, Late-Summer Caution: 3 Charts to Watch

October 16, 2025

Tech Taps the Brakes, Homebuilders Hit the Gas:...

October 16, 2025

The Best Five Sectors, #28

October 16, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Meta AI will use its ‘memory’ to provide better recommendations

    October 16, 2025
  • Apple’s Sports app now tells you where you can watch nationally broadcast games

    October 16, 2025
  • The Pebble smartwatch is making a comeback

    October 16, 2025
  • iOS 18.3 is out with tweaks to AI notification summaries

    October 16, 2025
  • Sony reduces OLED burn-in fears with a three-year warranty on InZone monitors

    October 16, 2025
  • Now Apple tells us how to update AirPods

    October 16, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2023 EfficientTimes.com All Rights Reserved.

EfficientTimes.com
  • Politics
  • Tech News
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick