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WASHINGTON - The US House Energy and Commerce Committee has asked AT&T, Verizon Communications and Qwest Communications to describe how US government agencies sought to obtain information about customers' telephone and internet use.
Last year, it was widely reported that some big telephone companies allowed the US government access to millions of telephone records for an anti-terrorism program. Former Qwest chief executive Joseph Nacchio refused the government's request up until he left the company in 2002, his lawyer has said.
"If reports about the government surveillance program are accurate, Congress has a duty to inquire about whether such a program violates the Constitution, as well as consumer protection and privacy laws," said Rep. John Dingell, the Michigan Democrat who heads the powerful energy and commerce committee.
The committee also wants to "examine the difficult position of the phone companies who may have been asked by the government to violate the privacy of their customers without the assurance of liability protections," Dingell said in a statement.
AT&T issued a statement saying it "is fully committed to protecting our customers' privacy" but would not comment on national security matters.
A Qwest spokesman declined comment. Officials with Verizon were not immediately available for comment.
Letters sent to the telephone companies asked them to describe how government requests for customer information are made and how the records are disclosed.
The lawmakers also want to know if the government tried to install equipment on phone networks to intercept internet traffic or presented a subpoena ordering the companies to install or permit such equipment.
The letters also asked phone companies if they provided information to the government about customers' "communities of interest" or networks contacts.
Dingell set an October 12 deadline for all three companies to respond to the committee's request.
Copies of the letters to phone companies were posted on the committee's website.
- REUTERS