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Surveillance Powers Lapse with No Deal in Senate

Surveillance Powers Lapse with No Deal in Senate
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By The Associated Press
Jun. 01, 2015 | WASHINGTON, DC
By The Associated Press Jun. 01, 2015 | 03:55 AM | WASHINGTON, DC
Several post-Sept. 11 anti-terror provisions have lapsed after the Senate failed to extend them before the deadline at midnight.



Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is running for president, took credit for the outcome as he used Senate rules to slow action.

 

The expiration may be only temporary. The Senate now looks ready to accept a House-passed bill that extends the measures and remakes the National Security Agency's controversial bulk phone collections program.

 

But at least for now, the NSA no longer has authority to collect Americans' phone records in bulk and search them for terror ties. Several other lesser-known provisions also have lapsed including one making it easier to track terror suspects who frequently discard cellphones.
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