Fourth Amendment constitutional rights prohibit any such use of surveillance without judicial authorization, typically, a search warrant or wire tap warrant issued after a formal presentation of evidence and the establishment of probable cause, as required by the original text of the Fourth Amendment (Schmalleger, 2008). According to the accounts published, the NSA specifically targeted journalists known to have been critical of the presidential administration of George W. Bush, which may raise other significant constitutional problems even beyond the Fourth Amendment issues (Scmalleger, 2008).
Possible Solutions to Balancing Effective Counterterrorism and the Fourth Amendment:
As pointed out by national security expert Randall Larsen (2007), one of the main problems with the so-called War on Terror as conceived by the former presidential administration is the fact that the FBI was an inappropriate choice for lead counterterrorism agency. That is primarily because the FBI is a law enforcement agency that was originally designed to solve crimes and prosecute them criminally. Criminal prosecution requires a much different approach than counterterrorism because the former is intended to punish criminal conduct after the fact while the latter is intended to prevent criminal conduct before it occurs (Larsen, 2007).
Similarly, because the FBI is a law enforcement agency,...
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