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Court Reverses Course, Allows Surveillance Evidence to Be Preserved for Lawsuits

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has reversed course on allowing the National Security Agency to retain phone call metadata for longer than five years in order to preserve evidence in civil lawsuits over governmental surveillance, The Hill reports. A "federal judge in San Francisco said the government could not destroy phone records after the five-year retention period expired," setting up a conflict with a prior ruling by F.I.S.C., The Hill further reports. Judge Reggie Walton said he was reversing course because the conflicting directions from the federal courts "'put the government in an untenable position and are likely to lead to uncertainty and confusion,'" according to The Hill.