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ACLU to Honor Connecticut Librarians and John Doe During Seattle Conference •
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Librarians Describe Life Under an FBI Gag Order
By Luke O'Brien
Wired
Sunday 24 June 2007
Life in an FBI muzzle is no fun. Two Connecticut librarians on Sunday described
what it was like to be slapped with an FBI national security letter and accompanying
gag order. It sounded like a spy movie or, gulp, something that happens under
a repressive foreign government. Peter Chase and Barbara Bailey, librarians
in Plainville, Connecticut, received an NSL to turn over computer records in
their library on July 13, 2005. Unlike a suspected thousands of other people
around the country, Chase, Bailey and two of their colleagues stood up to the
Man and refused to comply, convinced that the feds had no right to intrude on
anyone's privacy without a court order (NSLs don't require a judge's approval).
That's when things turned ugly.
The four librarians under the gag order weren't allowed to talk to each other
by phone. So they e-mailed. Later, they weren't allowed to e-mail.
After the ACLU took on the case and it went to court in Bridgeport, the librarians
were not allowed to attend their own hearing. Instead, they had to watch it
on closed circuit TV from a locked courtroom in Hartford, 60 miles away. "Our
presence in the courtroom was declared a threat to national security,"
Chase said.
Forced to make information public as the case moved forward, the government
resorted to one of its favorite tactics: releasing heavily redacted versions
of documents while outing anyone who didn't roll over for Uncle Sam. In this
case, they named Chase, despite the fact that he was legally compelled to keep
his own identity secret.
Then the phone started ringing. Pesky reporters wanted info. One day, the AP
called Chase's house and got his son, Sam, on the phone. When Chase got home,
he took one look at his son's face. "I could tell something was very wrong,"
he said. Sam told him the AP had called saying that Chase was being investigated
by the FBI. "What's going on?" Sam asked his father. Chase couldn't
tell him. For months, he worried about what his son must have been thinking.
As the case moved forward, the librarians had to resort to regular duplicity
with co-workers and family - mysteriously disappearing from work without an
explanation, secretly convening in subway stations, dancing around the truth
for months. The ACLU even advised Chase to move to a safehouse.
After the Bridgeport court ruled that the librarians constitutional rights
had been violated, the government appealed the decision to U.S. District Court
in Manhattan. Around the same time, the Congressional spin machine kicked into
overdrive. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wisconsin) wrote an op-ed in USA Today
that said:
"Zero. That's the number of substantiated USA Patriot Act civil liberties
violations. Extensive congressional oversight found no violations. Six reports
by the Justice Department's independent inspector general, who is required to
solicit and investigate any allegations of abuse, found no violations."
Once President Bush reauthorized the Patriot Act, the FBI lifted the librarians'
gag order. "By withdrawing the gag order before the court had made a decision,
they withdrew the case from scrutiny," Chase said. This eliminated the
possibility that the NSL provisions would be struck down.
Today, the Connecticut librarians are the only ones who can talk about life
with an NSL gag, despite the likelihood that there are hundreds if not thousands
of other similar stories out there. "Everyone else who would speak about
is subject to a five year prison term," Chase said. The prison term for
violating the gag order was added to the reauthorized Patriot Act.
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ACLU to Honor Connecticut Librarians and John Doe During Seattle Conference
American Civil Liberties Union
Friday 15 June 2007
Seattle - In a ceremony tonight, the American Civil Liberties Union will present
the Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty awards to four Connecticut librarians and
the president of a New York Internet Service Provider (ISP) who stood up against
the Patriot Act and refused to violate the privacy of their patrons and clients.
Representatives of Library Connection in Connecticut - Barbara Bailey, Peter
Chase, George Christian and Janet Nocek - and a "John Doe" ISP received
National Security Letters (NSLs) from the FBI but were gagged from revealing
that the FBI had sought information from them. Instead of complying with the
broad requests, which were issued without any judicial oversight, the librarians
and John Doe joined the ACLU in separate legal challenges. The FBI has since
dropped its gag order on the librarians, but continues to prevent the New York
"John Doe" from speaking publicly.
"The ACLU's progress in fighting back against the Patriot Act and other
repressive policies since 9/11 has been fueled and inspired by the individual
acts of courage of ordinary Americans," said ACLU President Nadine Strossen.
"We are proud to honor these brave individuals who stood up at a critical
moment in history and truly made a difference."
NSLs are used to compel libraries, universities, Internet providers and other
organizations to disclose sensitive information about their customers and patrons.
Using NSLs the FBI can find out which web sites a person has visited, which
books she has borrowed from the library, what her credit score is and to whom
she's been sending e-mails. Businesses and organizations that are served with
NSLs are prohibited by law from telling anyone else that the FBI demanded information
from them.
Since the Patriot Act was authorized in 2001, it has relaxed restrictions on
the FBI's use of the power to issue NSLs, and the number of NSLs issued has
seen an astronomical increase. While reports previously indicated a hundred-fold
increase to 30,000 NSLs issued annually, an extraordinary March 2007 report
from the Justice Department's own Inspector General puts the actual number at
over 143,000 NSLs issued between 2003 and 2005. The same investigation also
found serious FBI abuses of regulations and numerous potential violations of
the law.
The ACLU has challenged this Patriot Act statute in court in two separate cases.
In the Connecticut case, several weeks after the reauthorization of the Patriot
Act in 2006, the government gave up its legal battle over a gag order, and the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit effectively lifted the
gag. In late June, the FBI abandoned its demand all together and the librarians
can now disclose the NSL they received.
The New York case concerns an anonymous ISP that challenged the NSL statute
after the FBI relied on the statute to demand some of its records. District
Court Judge Victor Marrero struck down the statute in September 2004, saying
that "democracy abhors undue secrecy." In that landmark ruling, Judge
Marrero held that the unlimited gag imposed by the NSL law violates free speech
rights protected by the First Amendment. The appeals court ruled in May 2006,
that the district court should consider the constitutionality of the provision
in light of recent amendments made by Congress
"These five individuals are all humble, everyday men and women who did
something truly extraordinary," said Jameel Jaffer, Director of the ACLU
National Security Project. "For a long time after the September 2001 attacks,
the administration was able to scare many of its critics into silence. Attorney
General Ashcroft even suggested that those who disagreed with the administration's
policies were aiding the enemy. So those who spoke out - especially those who
spoke out despite an FBI gag order prohibiting them from doing so - displayed
real courage."
The awards will be presented by Jaffer and Strossen at a dinner ceremony Saturday
evening. The ceremony comes in the middle of the 2007 ACLU Biennial Conference,
during which more than 250 ACLU delegates have come to Seattle to consider and
vote on policy resolutions.
Previous recipients of the Roger N. Baldwin Medal of Liberty awards include
Gordon Hirabayashi and the late Fred Korematsu, who fought against the internment
of Japanese Americans during World War II; journalist Anthony Lewis; Dolores
Huerta, a champion of the rights of women, workers and immigrants; and the five
Judge Advocate General (JAG) lawyers who represented the first round of defendants
at Guantanamo Bay and challenged the flawed military commission process.
The member libraries of Library Connection include St. Joseph College and the
public libraries of Avon, Berlin, Bloomfield, Bristol, Burlington, Canton, Cheshire,
Cromwell, East Windsor, East Hartford, Enfield, Farmington, Glastonbury, Manchester,
Marlborough, New Britain, Newington, Plainville, Portland, Rocky Hill, Simsbury,
South Windsor, West Hartford, Wethersfield, Windsor Locks and Windsor.
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For more information on NSLs and the recipients of the Medal of Liberty
awards go to www.aclu.org/nsl.
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