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Is a Redo of Post-9/11 Paranoia the Best We Can Do?

by: William Fisher, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

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The "roving wiretap" provision in the Patriot Act is up for renewal. (Photo: Wesley Fryer / flickr)

The USA Patriot Act, rushed into law by a panicky US Congress in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, gave law enforcement sweeping new powers, including broad surveillance powers to spy on innocent Americans. But it also stipulated that three of its more controversial provisions should expire at the end of next month unless reapproved by lawmakers.

And it appears that reapproval may be about to happen - evidently with a green light from the Obama administration and over strong objections from human rights and civil liberties groups.

Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed the USA Patriot Act Extension Act of 2009. The bill makes only minor changes to the original Patriot Act and was further watered down by amendments adopted during the Committee's deliberations.

"The Senate Judiciary Committee had the opportunity to pass legislation to rein in a bill that has become a symbol of out-of-control government invasions of your privacy. They failed - approving a bill that does little to curtail the sweeping powers embedded in the Patriot Act," said the American Civil Liberties Union.

The committee's actions were driven by "short-term and political considerations," Chip Pitts, president of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, told us. The committee ignored "the need for a more sensible long-term, reasoned, rule-of-law approach," he said.

Now, civil libertarians are looking to the House of Representatives, where the Judiciary Committee has already begun to consider the measure. Both chambers must produce versions of the legislation, after which differences will be reconciled by a bicameral conference committee.

A number of parts of the law are due to expire at the end of next month. These are:

Section 213, which expands the government's ability to execute criminal search warrants (which need not involve terrorism) and seize property without telling the target for weeks or months.

The so-called "lone wolf" provision, which allows the government to wiretap any suspect believed to be involved in terrorism, even if that person has no connection to any known terrorist organization.

Section 215, which allows the FBI to seize a vast array of sensitive personal information and belongings - including medical, library and business records - using secret intelligence tools that do not require individual criminal activity. Although the records can only be seized pursuant to a court order, judges are compelled to issue these orders, making such judicial review nothing more than a rubber stamp. Section 215 Allows the FBI to use FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) court orders to seize any "tangible thing," including highly sensitive medical, library, business and travel records, from a wide variety of institutions under an extremely weak standard of judicial review. The section allows the government to obtain a broad range of business records and other tangible things, including library records, subscription information and credit card statements, so long as the FBI shows these are "relevant" to some terrorist investigation.

Section 505, which lowers the evidentiary standard for "national security letters," or NSLs, which are issued at the sole discretion of the Justice Department, impose a blanket gag order on recipients and are not subject to judicial review. NSLs can be used to seize a wide variety of business and financial records, and in certain instances could be used to access the membership lists of organizations that provide even very limited Internet services (message boards on the ACLU's web site for instance). Section 505 authorizes the government to seize financial, Internet, credit and telephone records without prior judicial review and without articulable suspicion that the target is a terrorist or spy.

The "roving wiretap" provision, which allows the government to tap phones and other electronic devices used by any person suspected of involvement in terrorism; a roving wiretap follows the target of the surveillance from telephone to telephone. Because there is a greater potential for abuse using roving wiretaps compared to traditional wiretaps, which apply to a single telephone, Congress insisted on important privacy safeguards when, prior to the Patriot Act, it first approved this "updated" surveillance power for criminal investigations.

Also being debated is the so-called "Material Support" Statute. This provision criminalizes providing "material support" to terrorists, defined as providing any tangible or intangible good, service or advice to a terrorist or designated group. As amended by the Patriot Act and other laws since 9/11, this section criminalizes a wide array of activities, regardless of whether they actually or intentionally further terrorist goals or organizations. Federal courts have struck portions of the statute as unconstitutional and a number of cases have been dismissed or ended in mistrial.

The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 has also became part of the debate. Passed last summer, Congress amended the FISA law to permit the government to conduct warrantless and suspicionless dragnet collection of US residents' international telephone calls and emails. Section 206 of the Patriot Act created roving wiretaps in FISA investigations. Section 206 erodes the basic constitutional rule of particularization by allow the government to obtain "roving wiretaps" without empowering the court to make sure that the government ascertain that the conversations being intercepted actually involve a target of the investigation. Section 206 also created "John Doe" roving wiretaps - wiretaps that need not specify a target or a device such as a telephone.

Prior to the Judiciary Committee markups, the ACLU and other civil liberties groups had endorsed the Justice Act, an alternative bill that would heavily reform not only the Patriot Act, but other overly broad surveillance laws.

Amendments that were offered, but failed by voice vote, included an amendment by Senator Durbin to curb the abuse of the NSL statute and another offered by Senator Feingold to allow the "lone wolf" provision to expire. (This never-used provision targets individuals who are not connected to terrorist groups.) An amendment also failed that would make it more difficult for recipients to challenge the gag order that comes with receiving an NSL.

However, two amendments offered Senator Feingold were included in the final bill. In one, the Department of Justice would be ordered to discard any illegally obtained information received in response to an NSL. In the second, the government would have to notify suspects of "sneak and peek" searches within seven days instead of the 30 days currently required by the statute. "Sneak and peek" searches allow the government to search a home without notifying the resident immediately.

Now the civil liberties community is stepping up lobbying efforts to ensure that the legislation that emerges from the House Judiciary Committee contains more protections for privacy and other civil liberties. Such legislation has been introduced in the House by three powerful Congressmen: John Conyers of Michigan, Jerrold Nadler of New York and Robert Scott of Virginia.

Their proposed amendments act would create more civil liberties protections for many of the Patriot Act powers, including restricting the gag order attached to receiving an NSL subpoena, terminating the never-used "lone wolf" surveillance power and limiting the use of NSLs to collect information on suspected terrorists or spies instead of innocent Americans.

However, the proposed new legislation leaves intact the Patriot Act's so-called "material support" provision, permitting prosecution of those who work with or for charities that give humanitarian aid in good faith to war-torn countries.

The actions of the Senate committee have left human rights advocates and many legal scholars perplexed because the committee chairman, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), is considered one of the most liberal members of the Senate, and its members include such other high-profile progressives as Al Franken of Minnesota, Russ D. Feingold of Wisconsin, Chuck Schumer of New York, Dick J. Durbin of Illinois and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island.

Asked to explain their votes, Chip Pitts of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee said "the secret and hypocritical lobbying by the Obama administration against reforms - while publicly stating receptiveness to them - was undoubtedly a huge if lamentable factor."

He also cited the recent arrests of Najibullah Zazi and others, noting that Leahy said that in light of these incidents, "this is no time to weaken or undermine the tools that law enforcement relies on to protect America."

Zazi has been charged with conspiring to bomb targets in the US. He allegedly traveled last year to Pakistan, where the FBI charges that he attended terrorist training camps.

"In sum, short-term and political considerations driven by dramatic events once again dramatically affected the need for a more sensible long-term, reasoned, rule-of-law approach, " Pitts told us, adding, "In the eight years since passage of the original Patriot Act, it's become clear that the escalating political competition to appear tough on terror (and avoid being accused of being 'soft on terror') brings perceived electoral benefits with few costs, with vital but fragile civil liberties being easily sacrificed. Even nominal and sometimes actual civil liberties advocates have become more used to the 'new normal,' seemingly forgetting the less visible but vital benefits of the liberties themselves - including for genuine and effective security, let alone for successful, prosperous, creative, dynamic open societies as opposed to closed societies like the former East Germany that used such approaches to their detriment."

"The persistent myths and claims that the Patriot Act hasn't been abused are simply ludicrous after the documentation by (civil liberties groups), regarding the torrent of abuse that has happened since 9/11," Pitts told us.

Now, all eyes are turning to the House of Representatives, where debate has already begun in the Judiciary Committee.

Congressmen Conyers, Nadler and Scott have introduced the USA Patriot Amendments Act of 2009, which reforms a number of Patriot Act provisions. The bill reins in the government's spying powers and would protect the privacy of records. H.R. 3845 amends the NSL authority, so that the government can only access communications, financial and credit records when they pertain to a terror suspect or spy. Under the original Patriot Act, the government can collect the records of innocent people whenever it deems them "relevant" to an investigation - without any oversight by an impartial court. The current standard is so low that independent audits found that approximately 50,000 are issued every year and many are issued against people two or three times removed from an actual suspect.

The Conyers-Nadler-Scott bill amends the Patriot Act's "roving John Doe" authority to protect the privacy of communications. That authority currently permits wiretap orders even without identifying either the person or the place to be tapped. The new bill would require the government to name either the person or the place.

The Patriot Act made it easier for the government to secretly conduct searches without giving prior notice by authorizing "sneak and peek" searches whenever notice would jeopardize an investigation. H.R. 3845 seeks to protect the privacy of homes and businesses by reining in this authority by removing this broad catch-all, but permits government officials to continue secret searches in emergency or urgent circumstances.

The USA Patriot Amendments Act requires that gag orders that come with NSLs or Section 215 orders meet traditional First Amendment standards. If a recipient of one of these requests wishes to speak out about the government's actions, the burden will be on the government to convince a court that national security will be jeopardized if the recipient is not gagged.

But the recent indictment of a suspected New York City terrorist is already being used to stir up paranoia on the Hill. Rep. Peter King, a right-wing New York Republican who is set to challenge Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's Senate seat in 2010, is a prime example. He says the arrest of Najibullah Zazi proves that lawmakers must renew the Patriot Act permanently.

The FBI arrested Najibullah Zazi this month after investigators collected sufficient evidence proving he was conspiring to create and use weapons of mass destruction on US soil.

But King believes that Zazi's capture and indictment would not have been possible without the Patriot Act.

"All the layers of defense President Bush set up after September 11 are working. The FBI is working more closely with local police, the Patriot Act, which allows roving wiretaps ... is essential," King told Fox News. "We have to have this, it's absolutely essential."

Chief among many lawmakers' complaints is that the Patriot Act undercuts privacy and threatens personal freedoms. But Republicans in particular have dismissed those criticisms, asserting the set of statutes has been indispensable in helping law enforcement agencies prevent future terrorist attacks.

As the Patriot Act approaches its sunset date, the Obama administration has signaled its interest in preserving key aspects of law - including its provisions on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the panel that grants federal officials the ability to conduct "roving wiretaps" on suspect terrorists. But Obama is likely to face staunch Democratic opposition to that effort, even as he promises his party members new Patriot Act provisions designed specifically to safeguard Americans' privacy rights.

While that legislative battle heats up, King on Monday reiterated the law in its original form was integral to the country's counterterrorism strategy.

"That's why we need all these layers, all these tools," King said. "There's no silver bullet here."

Another powerful representative in Congress, Jim Sensenbrenner, wants to make the Patriot Act permanent in almost all respects. Sensenbrenner's measure would leave the hotly debated law largely intact. It also would repeal the law's "sunset" provisions, under which some of its search and surveillance powers are to expire at the end of this year.

But the bill introduced Monday contains no such sunsets and is in keeping with recent comments by Sensenbrenner that he believes the Patriot Act is not over broad and has not been abused. It also reflects the Bush's administration's desire to make the act fully permanent.

Polling asking whether the Patriot Act should be made permanent produced the following results: No, 58 percent; Yes, 26 percent; some but not all, 14 percent.

Meanwhile, the House gave itself some breathing room by extending the expiring provisions of the Patriot Act until March 10. This legislation, H.R. 4659, ensures this vital antiterrorism law does not expire and gives the Senate more time to consider the House-Senate conference report that the House passed in December with the support of 44 Democrats and nearly all Republicans. The Senate is expected to pass this legislation this week.

Meanwhile, the ACLU has written to members of the House committees urging them to rein in what it sees as the over broad provision of the original Patriot Act.

Their letter said, "Congress rightly put sunsets on some provisions of the Patriot Act, so that lawmakers could reexamine the extraordinary powers when cooler heads would prevail."

Whether there are cooler heads in Congress remains to be seen.

  

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William Fisher has managed economic development programs in the Middle East and in many other parts of the world for the US State Department and USAID for the past thirty years. He began his work life as a journalist for newspapers and for the Associated Press in Florida. Fisher also served in the international affairs area during the Kennedy administration. Go to The World According to Bill Fisher for more.

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No one wants to write here

No one wants to write here because we all fear being spirited away, lol-wait no lol...

There are NOT cooler heads

There are NOT cooler heads in Congress, with very few exception, and the latter are marginalized "to the max" to say the least. In violation of the U.S. Constitution, civil liberties and civil libertarians, or strict Constitutionalists, are very wrongly seen as "weak", and far too many people bow to the fear mongering, especially the so-called "civil libertarians" in Congress who long ago sold out the American people to globalism and special interests. The traitors rule the day today in the U.S. government, and the U.S. government is no longer a government "of the People, by the People, (and) for the People. Congress constantly goes against the will of the majority of Americans, while only putting on a show of caring about the People and protecting the civil liberties of the Constitution; and most Americans don't have a clue about what grave danger we are in, as designed. 9-11 was carried out by the government as their "Reichstag Fire" to constantly be used as the cudgel and "justification" to bring in more and more draconian laws eradicating our liberties, giving the government more and more power to come after the completely innocent for exercising their First Amendment rights and duties to criticize the now completely out of control government and its abuses, and the government is more and more coming after completely innocent Americans for "perceived threatening conduct" under the "Patriot Act" [/"Reichstag Act---or whatever the first major act was called that the German government passed giving unlimited power to fascism (I forget the name of it at the moment), as we see right in from our faces taking place in the U.S. today], which can be and already does include ANYTHING such as protest, demonstrating, gatherings to plan protests and/or demonstrations, "speaking about the Constitution 'too much'", carrying and/or giving out copies of the U.S. Constitution, using Bible verses, etc., that criticize government and rebuke evil, seeking redress of grievances from the government for its many abuses, etc.; and all of these are supposed to be protected First Amendment RIGHTS AND DUTIES... God help us, for we are in extremely grave trouble. THE REPUBLIC IS FALLING!

There are NOT cooler heads

There are NOT cooler heads in Congress, with very few exceptions, and the latter are marginalized "to the max" to say the least. In violation of the U.S. Constitution, civil liberties and civil libertarians, or strict Constitutionalists, are very wrongly seen as "weak", and far too many people bow to the fear mongering, especially the so-called "civil libertarians" in Congress who long ago sold out the American people to globalism and special interests. The traitors rule the day today in the U.S. government, and the U.S. government is no longer a government "of the People, by the People, (and) for the People". Congress constantly goes against the will of the majority of Americans, while only putting on a show of caring about the People and protecting the civil liberties of the Constitution; and most Americans don't have a clue about what grave danger we are in, as designed. 9-11 was carried out by the government as their "Reichstag Fire" to constantly be used as the cudgel and "justification" to bring in more and more draconian laws eradicating our liberties, giving the government more and more power to come after the completely innocent for exercising their First Amendment rights and duties to criticize the now completely out of control government and its abuses, and the government is more and more coming after completely innocent Americans for "perceived threatening conduct" under the "Patriot Act" [/"Reichstag Act---or whatever the first major act was called that the German government passed giving unlimited power to fascism (I forget the name of it at the moment), as we see right in from our faces taking place in the U.S. today], which can be and already does include ANYTHING such as protest, demonstrating, gatherings to plan protests and/or demonstrations, "speaking about the Constitution 'too much'", carrying and/or giving out copies of the U.S. Constitution, using Bible verses, etc., that criticize government and rebuke evil, seeking redress of grievances from the government for its many abuses, etc.; and all of these are supposed to be protected First Amendment RIGHTS AND DUTIES... God help us, for we are in extremely grave trouble. THE REPUBLIC IS FALLING!

NUTS!

NUTS!

Why is it that these groups

Why is it that these groups are only concerned with the rights of the criminals and never the victims? They don't want any laws that will allow scientific methods, which include profiling, to be used to defend our country against terrorism. The terrorist attack at Fort Hood in Texas is a prime example - this terrorist could not be stopped or identified because it would have been politically incorrect to do so. I don't see these liberals making the protests that the victims' right to live was violated. These same organizations, who are screaming that rights are being violated, are also the ones who want other rights, such as the right to bear arms, to be outlawed. What a bunch of hypocrites - they have no credibility in most Americans' eyes.

The PATRIOT Act was wrong

The PATRIOT Act was wrong from the start and had nothing to do whatsoever with patriotism. No one read it when they signed it. It was wrtten before 9/11 which makes it (the whole event) suspect, becuse it was 1000s of pages long and came out only days after 9/11. I would have expected cooler heads to prevail by now, sending the PATRIOT Act into oblivion. This Act never did a thing to make us safe--it only makes us more like Berlin 1933.

(REDO:) Of course we're

(REDO:) Of course we're concerned about the victims, "Anonymous -- Tue, 11/10/2009 - 14:15"! But there is far too much imbalance in favor of being "tough on crime" at the expense of the Constitution and the rights of ALL accused people to be presumed innocent and to receive truly fair trials (which most people, especially impoverished minorities, don't receive). You people who scream for the blood of the presumed innocent UNTIL PROVEN GUILTY IN A COURT OF LAW WITH A JURY OF THEIR PEERS BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT, don't understand the Constitution, blindly violate it and scream for prosecutors, judges, etc., to blindly violate it, and are complicit in eradicating the Constitutions and our freedoms, making you un-American, anti-American and traitors to the Constitution and to this country. But you will probably never "get" it, and will instead keep labeling True Patriots and defenders of the Constitution as "liberal", etc. You probably won't get this either, but True Conservatives are True Liberals, and True Liberals are True Conservatives. Why? Because they all truly defend the Constitution, and ALL of its principles, without fail, from ALL "enemies foreign AND DOMESTIC (meaning from the MANY enemies of the Constitution and freedom(s), like yourself, right here in the U.S.)". And anti-Constitutionalists like yourself have no credibility in millions of True American Patriots' eyes. "YOU" are the true hypocrites; because, in defense against what I just said, you will claim you DO believe in and defend the Constitution; and then, in the next breath, you will continue to spout your blind contradictions of it. The ultimate in hypocrisy.

17:46-- S. Wolf Britain----

17:46-- S. Wolf Britain---- If you think that WE still live in a Republic, Democratic or otherwise, falling or not---- wake up..!... The Dream is over. The Fat Lady Sang... The song went like this--- as sung to the tune, 'The Yellow Submarine'... andah 1.. anna 2---- WE ALL LIVE IN A CORPORATACRACY.... a CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY... WE ALL LIVE IN A CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY..... and now WE sail beneath the waves... as our freedoms fade away... While we sit upon the couch... watching talking heads cry about.... how the other half is always bad... and then commercials sell us treats--- OH..!.. WE ALL LIVE IN A CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY.... a CORPORATACRACY....WE ALL LIVE IN A CORPORATACRACY... a CORPORATACRACY.... a CORPORATACRACY...

"Why is it that these groups

"Why is it that these groups are only concerned with the rights of the criminals and never the victims? " Why is it that right wingers always use a false statement and a false dichotomy to make their stupid points? What "these groups" are concerned with, if you can wrap you head around this, is CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS guaranteed to us in the Bill of Rights. If the government decides it can just do away with CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS, then who is safe from government abuses? The government has claimed patently unconstitutional powers for itself, outside of the rule of law, and it must be stopped. The logical conclusion of a goverment which writes itself more and more power is a fascist police state (of which there have been numerous examples throughout history). Since you can only think in childish terms like terrorists bad, you miss the big picture. Governments with large armies and arsenals are a much greater threat to everyone (with the capacity to extinguish all life on earth hundreds of times over, in this case) than a handful of resisters who lack such arsenals and capacity. The greater threat is always the mechanized, organized state apparatus,and it must be kept in check or else everyone will pay the price.

So right, "Motamanx" and

So right, "Motamanx" and "JD"! And you may be right, "Anonymous -- Wed, 11/11/2009 - 06:07", but that doesn't mean we should just give up in standing up to restore the republic if it is already completely fallen. Would the Founders and True Patriots throughout the history of the U.S. give up? No, of course not. They would die if necessary to save, or restore, this republic. And that is what ALL of us have got to do. We have got to put our liberty and very lives on the line to save True Freedom, or least try to; otherwise, we are screwed anyway. Live free, die free! Standing up for True Freedom no matter what, even if the republic is already completely fallen, is living free; and if the government interns and/or murders us for doing nothing but standing up for our God-given human rights to True Freedom, then we die free whether they think so or not, because we are free in our hearts' and minds', and they cannot take that away from us no matter what they do. But, if we give up and don't "live free" in that way, we will die slaves. Don't be fearful, cowardly and thereby traitorous to God, country and world, if you are. God's perfect Love casts out fear. Live Truly Free, die Truly Free.