A landmark ruling by the Federal Administrative Court has found the Swiss Federal Intelligence Service's (FIS) cross-border surveillance practices to be in violation of the Constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights, citing a lack of safeguards for data protection and journalistic sources.

"The legislator must rectify the shortcomings as part of the ongoing revision of the law."
"It cannot be guaranteed that FIS only processes significant and correct data."
The Swiss Federal Intelligence Service (FIS) has been dealt a crushing legal blow. In a landmark decision that shakes the very foundations of national security operations, the Federal Administrative Court has ruled that the FIS's cross-border radio and cable surveillance practices are fundamentally unconstitutional. This is not a minor bureaucratic correction; it is a judicial condemnation of a system operating in the shadows without adequate legal tethering. The court explicitly declared these operations incompatible with both the Swiss Constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights, signaling an immediate end to the 'wild west' era of digital snooping.
This ruling comes at a critical juncture, as the nation grapples with a surveillance apparatus that has been expanding at an alarming rate. Reports indicate that surveillance sweeps of the telecommunications network doubled in 2024 alone, painting a picture of an agency emboldened by lack of restraint. However, the judiciary has now drawn a definitive line in the sand. The court's message is unambiguous: the pursuit of security cannot come at the expense of fundamental rights. The FIS is now forced to confront the reality that its operational playbook is illegal, and the implications for ongoing investigations are staggering.
Data protection safeguards within the FIS are virtually non-existent, according to the court's scathing assessment. The ruling exposes a terrifying reality: there is currently no guarantee that the intelligence service restricts its processing to only significant or correct data. Instead, the agency appears to be operating a digital dragnet, vacuuming up information with insufficient filters to separate relevant intelligence from the private lives of innocent citizens. This lack of precision is not just a technical oversight; it is a systemic failure that violates the core tenets of privacy.
In a modern democracy, the state's power to intrude must be balanced by rigorous checks. Yet, the court found that the applicable law is devoid of necessary precautions. The FIS has been operating in a legal vacuum where the accuracy and significance of the data they harvest are unchecked. This carelessness with personal data creates a dangerous potential for abuse, where errors in intelligence gathering could lead to unwarranted scrutiny of Swiss residents. The court's findings suggest that the FIS's data handling practices are dangerously primitive compared to the sophisticated technology they employ to intercept it.
Sacred confidentiality is under siege. The court identified a critical and dangerous gap in the current legal framework: the complete lack of protection for professional secrecy. Under the current regime, the FIS has the capability to intercept communications involving journalistic sources and lawyer-client privilege without specific safeguards. This is a direct threat to the democratic process and the rule of law. When whistleblowers cannot speak to the press safely, and when citizens cannot consult their attorneys in private, the machinery of justice grinds to a halt.
The ruling highlights that sensitive communications—those that form the bedrock of a free society—are being treated with the same disregard as general data traffic. This exposure chills freedom of expression and undermines the legal defense system. The court's intervention serves as a vital shield, asserting that the state's desire to know everything does not override the professional duties of confidentiality that lawyers and journalists hold. Without these protections, the "watchdogs" of society are effectively muzzled by the fear of state surveillance.
Who watches the watchmen? The answer, it seems, is no one effective. The Federal Administrative Court's ruling lays bare a catastrophic failure of supervision. The current system offers neither sufficiently effective oversight of information procurement nor a viable legal remedy for those who have been targeted. It is a closed loop of authority where the FIS acts as judge, jury, and executioner of privacy rights. Citizens who suspect they have been wrongfully surveilled have no effective mechanism to seek a subsequent review, leaving them powerless against the state apparatus.
This lack of accountability creates a "black box" of intelligence operations. Without independent, robust supervision, the agency's reach can expand indefinitely, as evidenced by the doubling of surveillance sweeps in 2024. The court has effectively declared that trust is not a strategy. A modern intelligence service requires rigorous, external validation and a clear path for legal recourse. The current absence of these mechanisms renders the entire operation illegitimate in the eyes of the law.
The mandate for Bern is crystal clear: fix the law, and do it now. The court has explicitly ordered the legislator to rectify these profound shortcomings as part of the ongoing revision of the intelligence law. This is not a suggestion; it is a judicial imperative. The government can no longer drag its feet or hide behind vague assertions of national security. The specific failures identified—lack of data safeguards, exposure of professional secrets, and absence of oversight—must be written out of existence through robust new legislation.
This ruling places immense pressure on Parliament to deliver a revised law that respects the Constitution while maintaining security. The era of giving the FIS a blank check is over. Legislators must now craft a framework that incorporates strict checks and balances, ensuring that Switzerland does not slide into a surveillance state. The ball is now in the politicians' court, and the public will be watching closely to see if they choose to protect the rights of the people or the power of the spies.