CREATORS
December 2, 2025
In early
October, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) revealed
that the FBI obtained personal cell phone data from eight Republican senators
as part of an investigation into the conspiracy to overturn the results of the
2020 Presidential Election so that outgoing President Donald Trump could remain
in office.
In 2023,
the FBI sought and obtained data about the senators' phone use from Jan. 4
through Jan. 7, 2021. The data showed when and to whom calls were made, as well
as the duration and general location of the call. The data did not include the
content of the call.
Some
members of the Senate were outraged by the revelation. The U.S. Senate was so
incensed at the perceived invasion of privacy that it decided that American
taxpayers should pay the "aggrieved" senators millions of dollars to
prevent the FBI from ever investigating senators without letting them know in
advance.
While literally millions of federal workers were not being paid during the 43-day government shutdown, lawmakers were scheming about how to cash in on the government impasse.
As
Americans were standing in line at food pantries, Senators were sitting in the
proverbial "smoke-filled room" drawing up a real money grab — even by
the lowly standards of the U.S. Congress.
Senate
Republicans secured a provision in the bipartisan, shutdown-ending government
funding package that could award senators millions of dollars for having their
phone records collected without their knowledge as part of the election
investigation.
A person
with direct knowledge of the legislative negotiations confirmed to Politico
that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) oversaw the inclusion of the
money grab provision. It was tucked into the legislative branch spending
measure for fiscal year 2026, part of a three-bill appropriations package
approved by the Senate.
According
to the blog Lawfare, the law created a civil cause of action — "that is,
the ability to sue in court — if a senator is not notified when providers (cell
phone companies) receive a subpoena for his or her data, or that of his or her
staff."
The law
makes it possible for eight sitting senators to cash in. The legislation
conveniently provides that this new cause of action is retroactive to January
2022 — the data was obtained in 2023.
This means
that those eight senators will recover a minimum of $500,000. Eight senators
voted to create a retroactive cause of action so they could recover at least
half a million dollars.
Lawfare
suggests, the $500,000 remedy is available for each "instance," which
means that a typical subpoena seeking data from a senator's cell phone and
email account could cost $1 million. Collecting the same data from a Senator's
staff — say, five individuals plus the senator — could cost taxpayers $6
million in damages. Lawfare further points out that the common practice of
"refreshing the collected data by issuing new subpoenas as the
investigation progresses could double or triple the amount of damages."
The
controversy got more interesting when members of the House of Representatives
finally read the legislation they passed to end the government shutdown. It was
unclear if the House was outraged more by what the Senate did or by finding out
the payoff did not include members of the House.
The House
recently voted 427-0 to repeal the self-serving part of the new law. According
to PBS, a senior White House official, who was granted anonymity to describe
President Trump's thinking, said that the president had no objections to the
language added by the senators and indicated privately that he does not think
it was a bad provision. The source said, "The White House had been fully
looped in as senators drafted the bill."
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book
The Executioner's Toll, 2010 was released by McFarland Publishing. You can
reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino
To visit Creators CLICK HERE

