Name Claire Eagan Role Judge | ||
Education Trinity Washington University, Fordham University School of Law |
Claire Eagan (born 1950) is a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma.
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Early life and education
Born in The Bronx, New York, Eagan graduated from Trinity Washington University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1972, and later from Fordham University School of Law with a Juris Doctor in 1976. At Fordham, Eagan was a commentary editor of the Fordham Law Review.
Career
Eagan began her legal career working as a law clerk to Judge Allen Edward Barrow of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma from 1976 to 1978. She was in private practice attorney in Oklahoma from 1978 to 1998. Eagan served as a United States Magistrate Judge for the Northern District of Oklahoma from 1998 until 2001.
Federal judicial career
On the recommendation of Senators James Inhofe and Don Nickles, Eagan was nominated to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma by President George W. Bush on September 4, 2001, to a seat vacated by Thomas Rutherford Brett. Eagan was confirmed by the Senate on October 23, 2001, on a Senate vote and received her commission the next day. Eagan served as the Chief Judge of the Court from 2005 to 2012.
Assignment to FISC
In February 2013 she was appointed to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), established in 1978 per the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Her term runs to May 2019.
She was the author of the August 29, 2013 FISC opinion released on September 17, 2013, explaining that the call metadata collection program was constitutional, and thus "any decision about whether to keep it was a political question, not a legal one". The first FISC opinion written since the Snowden leaks (judges must reauthorize the program every 90 days and generally they are "brief reiterations of the court’s legal analysis"), the lengthy 29-page opinion is thought to have been written "for the purpose of public release". U.S. District Judge Claire Eagan said “metadata that includes phone numbers, time and duration of calls is not protected by the Fourth Amendment, since the content of the calls is not accessed.” In the opinion, Judge Eagan said “data collection is authorized under Section 215 of the Patriot Act that allows the FBI to issue orders to produce tangible things if there are reasonable grounds to believe the records are relevant to a terrorism investigation.” The opinion authorized the FBI to “collect the information for probes of "unknown" as well as known terrorists.” She also noted that no U.S. telecommunications company had legally refused to turning over customer metadata, "despite the mechanism for doing so".