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        A sign stands outside the National Security Agency campus in Fort Meade, Md.
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          PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
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        By
              <div data-scrim="{"type":"author","header":"Devlin Barrett","subhead":"The Wall Street Journal","list":[{"type":"link","icon":"bio","url":"http://topics.wsj.com/person/A/biography/7227","text":"Biography"},{"type":"link","icon":"twitter","url":"http://twitter.com/DevlinBarrett","text":"@DevlinBarrett"},{"type":"link","icon":"google","url":"https://plus.google.com/106657221480766311222/about","text":"Google+"},{"type":"link","icon":"email","url":"mailto:devlin.barrett@wsj.com","text":"devlin.barrett@wsj.com"}]}" itemscope="" itemprop="author" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" class="">
                  <span itemprop="name" class="">Devlin Barrett</span>
                  
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      May 7, 2015 9:31 a.m. ET
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      --><p class="">A federal appeals court ruled Thursday the National Security Agency’s controversial collection of millions of Americans’ phone records<a href="http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2015/04/22/mitch-mcconnell-readies-bill-to-reauthorize-controversial-nsa-program/" target="_self" class=""> isn't authorized by the Patriot Act</a>, as the Bush and Obama administrations have long maintained.</p><p class="">The ruling by the three-judge panel in New York comes at a delicate point in the national debate over government surveillance, as Section 215 of the Patriot Act is due to expire next month and lawmakers are haggling about whether to renew it, modify it, or let it die.</p><p class="">The court’s ruling came in a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union arguing the data collection should be stopped because it violates Americans’ privacy rights. A lower court judge ruled the program was constitutional, and the civil liberties group appealed, leading to Thursday’s decision.</p><p class="">“The text of (Section 215) cannot bear the weight the government asks us to assign to it, and...does not authorize the telephone metadata program,’’ the court wrote.</p><p class="">The court declined to address the issue of whether the program violates Americans’ rights, because, they found, it was never properly authorized by existing law.</p><p class="">The judges didn't order the collection to stop, noting that the legislative debate and the looming expiration of Section 215 will force action on the issue one way or another.</p><p class="">The judges also note that if Congress decides to approve some version of the phone data collection program in coming days, then the privacy issue could be revisited in court.</p><p class="">The panel sent the case back to the lower court judge for further review based on the appeals court findings.</p><p class=""> <strong class="">Write to </strong>Devlin Barrett at <a href="mailto:devlin.barrett@wsj.com" target="_blank" class="">devlin.barrett@wsj.com</a> </p>

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