Liberties FRR'S
Respond to all parts of the question. In your response, use substantive examples where appropriate
1
Following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, President Bush ordered the use of wiretaps to
collect metadata on phone calls being made between the United States and countries where
terrorists were suspected of operating. Because this practice involved a very broad collection of data,
few of the wiretaps were authorized by warrants.
Develop an argument that takes a position on whether the collection of the data was constitutional or
that it was unconstitutional.
Use at least one piece of evidence from the following foundational documents:
The Fourth Amendment
The Federalist 51
The Federalist 70
In your essay, you must:
✓ Respond to the prompt with a defensible claim or thesis that establishes a line of reasoning.
✓ Support your claim with at least two pieces of specific and relevant evidence.
One piece of evidence must come from one of the foundational documents listed above.
A second piece of evidence can come from any other foundational document not used as
your first piece of evidence, or it may be from your knowledge of course concepts.

Respuesta :

Following the terrorist attacks that occured in the United States the use of the wired tapings was against the fourth amendment which stops unreasonable searches and unwarranted search of persons by the government.

The federalist 51 was written in defense of checks and balances in the government.

With these documents it could be said that the searches was unconstitutional, but given the fact that the call wiring was due to terrorism, an excuse could be made here.

The Patriot act of the United States

The Patriot act was an act that allowed that calls that were being made to the nations that supported terrorism was tapped into in the country.

This was on the wake of the september act of terrorism in the United States.

Read more on the patriot act here: https://brainly.com/question/25741451