Gun Groups Sue Feds Over Terror Watchlist

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A U.S. Department of Homeland Security employee works in front of a U.S. threat level map and monitoring display inside the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center during a guided media tour in Arlington, Virginia June 26, 2014. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

According to a complaint filed by Gun Owners of America and others on Dec. 22, in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York:

 “Being a named person on a ‘terrorist watch list’ is not a federal statutory disqualifying factor, nor should it be,” the lawsuit states. “Permanent deprivation of a fundamental civil right cannot and should not occur because something as small as an alleged, anonymous tip places an individual in a secret database managed by the attorney general, the FBI, and/or the TSC to which the individual has no right of access and no method of recourse.”

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Guns Reports:

Several gun rights groups sued the federal government last week over alleged constitutional violations made against gun owners.

Gun Owners of America and others allege the Department of Justice illegally uses the federal NICS background check system with a secret database containing names linked to suspected terrorists to monitor gun owners – a violation of several constitutional rights, according to the complaint filed Dec. 22 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York.

 “Being a named person on a ‘terrorist watch list’ is not a federal statutory disqualifying factor, nor should it be,” the lawsuit states. “Permanent deprivation of a fundamental civil right cannot and should not occur because something as small as an alleged, anonymous tip places an individual in a secret database managed by the attorney general, the FBI, and/or the TSC to which the individual has no right of access and no method of recourse.”

Courthouse News reports the 25-page complaint was filed by attorney Paloma Capanna, who has filed at least four federal lawsuits opposing gun control.

The lawsuit comes after increased scrutiny over federal investigation techniques allegedly used after two Muslim shooters killed 14 people and injured 22 others at a government social services building in San Bernardino, California, earlier this month.    

In that case, the shooters reportedly obtained their firearms through a straw purchase and were not flagged in either the National Instant Criminal Background Check System or the terror database, also referred to as the terrorism watchlist, but is actually composed of several lists, including a “no-fly” list used to prevent people from boarding commercial aircraft in and out of the United States.

The suit also comes after revelations about the secret terror database came to light last year when The Intercept – created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar – obtained a March 2013 government document outlining the Obama administration’s quiet expansion of the terrorist watchlist system.        

The 166-page document was issued by the National Counterterrorism Center – the agency charged with maintaining and growing the database – and highlights the federal government’s assumed role in a post-9/11 America created during the Bush administration in 2004.

The Terrorist Screening Database – likely managed in conjunction with the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, which monitors international terrorism – the system contains the names of more than 2,000 people who have legally purchased guns over the past decade.

Though the system is extensive, with more than 700,000 names in the screening database in 2007 and likely more than a million today, only a fraction of those – 7,000 – are the names of American citizens.

Also named in the suit as plaintiffs are members of the National Rifle Association, Gun Owners of America, the Second Amendment Foundation, the Shooters Committee on Political Education, the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association, Oathkeepers, New York Revolution, NY2A and III%.

The complaint calls out U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, FBI Director James B. Comey, Christopher M. Piehota, director of the Terrorist Screening Center, and Thomas E. Brandon, acting director of the ATF.

Photo:  Bing

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