I would like to hear his definition of wiretap but if he's talking about the ability to monitor calls real time rather than being granted a court order then he most certainly DOES have that ability.
NPR's Mark Memmot reports Carrie Cordero, the director of national securities studies at Georgetown University Law Center, spoke with Steve Henn on NPR's Morning Edition on Wednesday and told Henn "the notion that this individual has the authority to go ahead and ... 'wiretap' people is just ridiculous.
"For an analyst sitting in Hawaii to initiate a wiretap on anyone anywhere, he or she would need much, much more," Henn said. "Perhaps most notably, the ability to monitor new calls, emails and chats in real-time."
I've posted several times that as part of my job I could sit in my home and monitor calls real time in a switch over 300 miles away. If you have access to a switch to gather metadata you can monitor live calls. I've also monitored real time text chats between employees and had the ability to print out the full text of those chats. This isn't rocket science. Whether that ability is granted NSA employees is another thing entirely but the difference in being able to monitor a call real time with a court order and without a court order is simply the piece of paper. Be wary of the words they are using. In this case I don't think Snowden is referring to being granted a piece of paper but rather the physical ability to monitor or "wiretap" calls.
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/8...retapping.html



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