Dec. 15, 2005
NEWS ANALYSIS
Changes Could Bring Some Transparency to Patriot Act
By Margaret Talev
McClatchy Newspapers
Washington, DC -- Civil libertarians complain there is no clear picture of
how casually or widely the U.S. government snoops into the lives of ordinary
Americans since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
That could change this week, if the House and Senate give final approval to
legislation extending key powers of the anti-terrorism USA Patriot Act set
to expire at year's end.
Public librarians and free-speech activists, and to a lesser extent some
business leaders, say the House-Senate compromise up for final consideration
in both chambers beginning Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2005 still gives the
government too much power to peek into people's lives. But if it prevails,
the legislation will provide new requirements that the federal government
begin regularly auditing and reporting to Congress on how and how often the
Patriot Act is being used -- a possible silver lining for critics.
"It's certainly possible if there were more public disclosure, there would
be more public pressure" on the government not to abuse surveillance powers,
said Lisa Graves, senior counsel for legislative strategy for the ACLU. At
the same time, she said of mandated government reporting: "Oftentimes the
information is late, or it's generalized in ways that make it hard to add up
what's going on."
The prospects for passage of the legislation were uncertain in the Senate.
With a filibuster threatened and lawmakers hoping to recess for the year by
next week, at least two proposals were circulating to extend the current
provisions into next year on an emergency basis.
The USA Patriot Act has given federal investigators broad powers to track
terrorism over the past four years by searching individuals' health, tax,
business or library records, telephone, Internet and e-mail communications,
and private homes, with greater ease and secrecy than in the past and with
little recourse.
"It has protected American liberty and saved American lives," President Bush
said in a weekend radio address.
The Justice Department has released selective data in bits and pieces to
lawmakers and publicly including during congressional testimony earlier this
year.
But the Justice Department isn't required to -- and doesn't -- release the
overall statistics on how many times the government has invoked those powers
overall: Dozens? Tens of thousands? As a result, civil libertarians say
there's no way to know how prevalent a practice the government has made of
collecting previously private data about people with no connection to
terrorists -- other than having lived in a certain city, read a book or
banked or bought goods from a business that also crossed the path of a
target of an intelligence investigation.
The government also has kept secret its data on national security letters
issued since passage of the Patriot Act. The FBI has for decades had the
power to secretly review financial transactions, under national security
letters, of suspected foreign agents. But, citing unnamed government
sources, the Washington Post last month reported as much as a hundred-fold
increase over traditional use of those letters in recent years, with the FBI
issuing now more than 30,000 national security letters a year, many touching
citizens with no apparent terrorism ties. The federal government objected to
the report but did not counter that number.
That galvanized a cross-section of groups with concerns about the Patriot
Act.
"People begin to scratch their heads and say, 'Gee, are there really 30,000
terrorism investigations going on in the United States?" said Bruce Josten
of the U.S Chamber of Commerce, which supports the House-Senate compromise.
Josten said he is hopeful the proposed reporting requirements "will evolve
into additional hearings and information gathering related to these national
security letters."
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-PA, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, told
his colleagues in a letter distributed over the weekend that the audit and
reporting requirements in the compromise legislation are among several
"safeguards to prevent abuse." The compromise legislation also would require
investigators to provide some statement of facts with terrorism-related
search orders, and would give businesses, libraries and others from whom
records are being sought the explicit right to consult attorneys and
challenge the government's requests.
Controversial provisions would be extended for four years, instead of a
decade as the White House sought. These include provisions covering roving
wiretaps and certain records searches.
Congressional aides said Monday that the House should be able to pass the
compromise legislation on Wednesday, Dec. 14 with a comfortable margin.
In the Senate, however, Sen. Russ Feingold, D-WI, has threatened to mount a
filibuster. If resistance appears serious enough, senators may instead vote
to give an emergency extension to the Patriot Act in its current form and go
back to negotiations next year _ dropping the reporting requirements in the
interim.
Several Senate Republicans have joined Democrats in calling for stronger
limits on the government. Three -- John Sununu of New Hampshire, Lisa
Murkowski of Alaska and Larry Craig of Idaho -- on Monday signed onto
legislation with Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the Judiciary Committee's
ranking Democrat, seeking to scrap the compromise, extend current Patriot
Act provisions through March 31, 2006 and go back to negotiations early next
year.
A Senate leadership aide speaking on condition of anonymity said Monday that
Republicans are unlikely to agree to a three-month extension. If a vote this
week on the compromise looks doomed, they might push for a one-year
extension, the aide said, and return to talks after next November's
elections.
Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.