A federal judge in New York ruled Friday that the National Security
Agency's bulk data-collection program does not violate the law, and that
it serves as an effective "counterpunch" to Al-Qaeda. US District Court
Judge William Pauley dismissed the lawsuit brought by the American
Civil Liberties Union after the NSA's program came to light in the
Edward Snowden leaks. The ACLU argued that the data collection violated
Americans' Fourth Amendment right to privacy and First Amendment right
to free association. RT's Sam Sacks takes a closer look at Pauley's
ruling, and how it differs from a recent ruling by US District Court
Judge Richard Leon's that said the NSA's program was "likely
unconstitutional."
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