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By Anna Driver

 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - BellSouth Corp. and AT&T Inc. were named in a $200 billion lawsuit on Tuesday alleging that telecommunications companies violated privacy rights by turning over customer phone records for use in a U.S. government call-tracking program to detect terrorist plots.

 

BellSouth and AT&T were added to the lawsuit seeking class-action status that was initially filed against Verizon Communications Inc. in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on Friday.

 

USA Today reported last week that BellSouth, AT&T and Verizon had turned over tens of millions of consumers' telephone records to the National Security Agency (NSA) so it could analyze call patterns.

 

"We're outraged at the actions of the NSA, the administration and the phone companies," Bruce Afran, a public interest lawyer from New Jersey, said at a news conference. He added that he wanted the companies to understand the massive financial exposure they had on this issue.

 

President Bush defended intelligence programs that have raised concerns the government is spying on Americans, telling reporters at a White House press conference Tuesday that his administration was obliged to "connect dots" to protect citizens after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

 

The amended lawsuit, filed on behalf of 26 plaintiffs in 18 states, seeks damages for the estimated 200 million customers of all three companies.

 

The New York Times reported in December that the NSA was eavesdropping inside the United States without warrants on the international phone calls and e-mails of terrorism suspects sparked an uproar. The USA Today report, if confirmed, means the agency's domestic program has been on a much wider scale than is generally believed.

 

The NSA is charged with the surveillance of foreign communications and protecting U.S. government communications.

 

Verizon said in a statement that is would not confirm or deny whether it has any relationship to the NSA program but that it did not provide the agency with customer records for call data.

 

BellSouth on Monday denied turning over customer telephone records to the NSA on a large scale and said it did not have a contract with the agency.

 

"Our statement speaks for itself it's clear we've had no association with the NSA, so any lawsuit would be moot," BellSouth spokesman Jeff Battcher said, referring to the statement on Monday.

 

A spokesman for AT&T declined to comment on the lawsuit, and cited an e-mail statement from the company saying it has not given customer information to law enforcement authorities or government agencies without legal authorization.

 

(Additional reporting by Sinead Carew)

 

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle....&archived=False

so who gets the money?

so who gets the money?

 

 

The lawyers. If it gets class-action status, the lawyers will keep about 75% of the judgement should they win. The rest is divided between the plaintiffs.

 

The average payout for a class action suit to plaintiffs is something like $300.

I despise Bellsouth.

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