Liberty seeks judicial review of Snoopers’ Charter
Liberty is launching a legal challenge to the UK’s Investigatory Powers Act – legislation that allows the state to monitor everybody’s web history and email, text and phone records, and hack computers, phones and tablets on an industrial scale.
Liberty is seeking a High Court judicial review of the core bulk powers in the “Snoopers’ Charter” – and is calling on the public to help it take on the challenge by donating via crowdfunding platform CrowdJustice.
Martha Spurrier, director of Liberty, said: “Last year, this government exploited fear and distraction to quietly create the most extreme surveillance regime of any democracy in history.
“Hundreds of thousands of people have since called for this act’s repeal because they see it for what it is – an unprecedented, unjustified assault on our freedom.
“We hope anybody with an interest in defending our democracy, privacy, press freedom, fair trials, protest rights, free speech and the safety and cybersecurity of everyone in the UK will support this crowdfunded challenge, and make 2017 the year we reclaim our rights.”
Liberty will seek to challenge the lawfulness of the following powers, which it believes breach the public’s rights:
Liberty’s challenge comes just weeks after a landmark ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) rendered core parts of the Investigatory Powers Act effectively unlawful.
In a challenge to the Data Retention and Investigatory Powers Act (DRIPA) by MP Tom Watson, represented by Liberty, the CJEU ruled the UK government was breaking the law by indiscriminately collecting and accessing the nation’s internet activity and phone records.
DRIPA forced communications companies to store records of everybody’s emails, texts, phone calls and internet communications and let hundreds of public bodies grant themselves access with no suspicion of serious crime or independent sign-off.