The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court rejected the request of governmental lawyers to hold telephone metadata beyond the current five-year limit, Computer World reports. The Department of Justice had reasoned the evidence would need to be preserved for privacy civil lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the surveillance of phone calls. The court reasoned: "The government can be sanctioned for destruction of evidence only if it is established that it had an obligation to preserve it at the time it was destroyed, that the records were destroyed 'with a culpable state of mind,' and the destroyed evidence was relevant to the party's claim or defense," Computer World also reports.